The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

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John Everett
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Re: The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

Post by John Everett »

He's still glossy from fresh oil paint. But I hope to have it finished by the next of next week.

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Shawn Ramsey
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Re: The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

Post by Shawn Ramsey »

BY the next of next week :lol:

Oil pants, I thought you switched to acrylics?

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John Everett
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Re: The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

Post by John Everett »

Shawn Ramsey wrote:BY the next of next week :lol:

Oil pants, I thought you switched to acrylics?

Shawn
Not for skin tones. I'm still going with oil for faces. But on bigger figures I've found that acrylics are too harsh. It seems that smaller figure are better for sudden color transitions.
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Justin Wooding
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Re: The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

Post by Justin Wooding »

Coming along nicely John. Very colourful and creative :D
Woody...

Trying hard to do some modeling!

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John Everett
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Re: The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

Post by John Everett »

Thanks, everybody!

He's done.

I'll be sending out to the recipient in the next day or two.

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Steve Hutchinson
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Re: The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

Post by Steve Hutchinson »

Great work John

The figure is an intrinsic part of the book?

Is the book a good read?

The figure certainly is a cracker :D :D

Very nice one

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John Everett
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Re: The Anarchist (1/16 or 100mm size)

Post by John Everett »

Steve Hutchinson wrote:
The figure is an intrinsic part of the book?
Is the book a good read?

Steve H

Yes, and not bad.

The Anarchist is Satan. The apple is important to both the hero of the story as well as the chaotic force which turns our young hero away from his divinely scripted path.

It's a deliberate retelling of Voltaire's Candide. A young man lives in a perfect world overseen by a benevolent Watchmaker (symbolic of the Garden of Eden or perhaps even heaven). But he becomes bored and disillusioned by his dreams of bigger things. He makes a leap of faith, begins a life changing adventure and finds that true enlightenment can only occur through solitary, self-reflective discovery. (a notion of eastern religion rather than western philosophy)

The book itself is a story you've read a dozen times before. But there's a whole backstory which makes the novel a lot more interesting.

If you're a fan of the Canadian Rock trio, Rush (even if you're not a fan, I guarantee you've heard their songs on radio) you will know that the drummer and lyricist Neil Peart lost his whole family back in 1997. This event put him on a course of personal discovery and soul searching which lasted nearly a decade. He wrote a couple of books about his years-long motorcycle trek across most of North America.

If you've read those travel logs, you will notice strong parallels between the lyrics contained in a body music lasting 40 years, Neil Peart's personal journey and the story told by the hero in the novel.

For many years Neil Peart and well established science fiction writer Kevin Anderson have been friends. They collaborated in creating the novel Clockwork Angels concurrently with the release of Rush's studio album of the same name.

In short, it's a book you've read before. But those who know the history will get more from reading it.
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