I had left space for the statue in the circular center section of the cathedral; I'd cut a 10" diameter hexagon section in the interlocking bases for it to sit on. I had plenty of height - the two-level walls are 6.5" tall and on the top of that is a tall dome. I wanted to use as much of that space as I could without it seeming crowded, depicting a gargantuan statue.
I'd described the statue as an "allegorical" depiction and as showing Verity as she would have been without cybernetic augmentation. These were deliberate choices - firstly, from a modelling perspective there are few enough models of female Tech-priests available and none of them in a larger scale. Similarly, I didn't want to have to try to create not only a large Necron construct, but one in a larger scale. But the allegorical depiction was important to the narrative, too - a Tech-priestess fighting a Necron would not become a symbol of religious devotion. It would be too-grounded in the "real" for the inhabitants of Ophelia.
I wanted to show a winged snake, similar to depictions of Quetzalcoatl and other "feathered serpents", fighting a warrior-woman in armor similar to that worn by the Sisters of Silence and Custodians; these are his household troops, and the Emperor would honor Verity by showing her wearing that armor.
eBay helped me out a great deal. I was able to find a resin model of a rattlesnake - about lifesize, I guess - intended to be put in your garden (I am not sure why - perhaps to scare off rodents?) I also purchased the Safari Twilight Pegasus for its wings, and a Wonder Woman action figure (6" tall, 1/12 scale). I deliberately chose this figure as it had a sword with a wing-design crossguard and eagle detailing on the plastron - both classic Imperial motifs.
I wanted to show the statue on the main peak of the mountain, with the Vault visible through a hole bored in the rock beneath it. I cut out a wooden base and marked roughly where the snake would sit. To ensure it would stay firmly in place while any glue dried, I drilled and countersunk some holes for screws.
Now I needed to reposition the snake's head a little - the pose had its head facing too-forward and too-low; there wouldn't be enough room for Wondie underneath! I cut the neck in two places.
I had some fun posing the components in a little "dragon slayer" vignette . . .
. . . but then it was back to work! I rotated each section of the snake one "scale" so the molded detail lined up. The snake itself was hollow (rotocast resin, I suspect) and to ensure I got a solid join I drove screws into the inner walls and poured resin in through a large hole I drilled in the back. This was where I was going to attach the wings, so it didn't matter that the scale detail was drilled away.
I attached it to the base using scraps of 3mm expanded PVC as fillers so, when I applied texture, the statue would appear to be sitting on it, not in it. I cut away the tail before I did this, so I could reposition it curling around Wondie (to give the figures more interaction). With that done, I set about posing Verity.
I don't have pictures of this process, just the final pose. I didn't have to really cut very much - the figure has a lot of freedom of movement. I cut the neck to tilt the head back (and trimmed off some of her hair so it could tilt back further). A wedge of scrap PVC glued between her neck and chin forces her head into the correct angle. I trimmed the left hip socket very slightly to allow a little more movement and cut half-way through the fingers of her left hand so it would grip the snake's jaw. Her thumb fits into a small hole I drilled in the snake's snout, and I shortened the snake's tongue so it wasn't licking her face!
To hold the joints in place once I had posed them the way I liked, I used some thin superglue - it flowed into the cracks and held the plastic very firmly. Her feet are pinned in place and the sword goes straight through a hole I drilled in the head.
I cut the tail up, removing small wedges so I could bend it tighter. It had the same hollow construction as the rest of the snake, and so I used brass rod and modelling putty to strengthen it. I used expanded polystyrene foam to bulk out the wooden block Verity was standing on (to make it look more like a mountain peak) and positioned the tail sections running up it. I'd already cut the rattle off, and will sculpt a tip on the tail wrapping around her.
Finally, I pinned and glued the wings in place. They are VERY small for such a large creature (even by the standards of fantasy creatures) but that is similar to many depictions of such things in older art.
So that is where she stands now! A few spots on the snake need filling, but it is pretty much finished. The major work is the armor on Verity, which I think I can do with plasticard and putty.
Comments welcome!
=][= Danforth Laertes
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