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For my ‘back story’ readers are directed to my posting in the Introduce Yourself section. The short version is that this is my first 1/35 project since I downed tools as a 16-year-old in 1984.
Those who followed me from the other site will know that this blog started almost two years ago. I’m going to start with a ‘redux’ of that blog to where it had reached in May 2018 and then carry on where I left off. So, my apologies for those who may have seen some of this before… The image above shows the diorama more or less in its current state.
The diorama is called Liberation, Italy 1944. It depicts a hill town (probably in Tuscany) soon after being over-run by the Allies during the advances which followed the liberation of Rome in June 1944 – so my setting is in the late summer / early autumn.
Just as it was with the public at the time, this has been a largely forgotten WWII subject for the modeller (at least compared with the plethora of Normandy / Eastern Front dioramas). The choice of an Italian setting was driven in part from reading two excellent books.
War in Val D'Orcia: An Italian War Diary, 1943-1944 by Iris Origo is a war diary written by an English-born woman who married an Italian aristocrat in the 1920s and lived on an estate in Tuscany throughout the Second World War. From her unique, local vantage point she witnessed the turmoil that enveloped the nation following the Allied invasion, the surrender of the Italian forces and the German occupation and recorded (in often harrowing detail) the effects on her community as the tide of war swept towards – and ultimately engulfed – them.
The second bookis Italy's Sorrow a Year of War 1944-45 by James Holland. Easily as good as anything by Anthony Beevor, it’s a very even-handed account of the latter half of the Allies’ notoriously slow, hard slog up the peninsula, full of first-hand anecdotes, character sketches and plenty of details to inspire.
It also helped that a couple of years ago we had a family holiday in Tuscany – the first time I have been to this beautiful part of the world. There is nothing quite like being where it happened to understand how to model a subject.
Like the Italian campaign, this has been a long haul, but if I can get it ready to show at Telford 2018 I will be happy. I have decided to aim for a competition less out of any lust for glory (who am I kidding?) and more for the added impetus that a deadline brings to any project. Like many of us, my modelling tends to come in fits and starts between family and work commitments…
Now I will be the first to admit that the bar for dioramas has been raised a country mile since those barmy days of the 1980s when I last modelled in 1/35. These days it is simply not enough to arrange a well-built vehicle on a tasteful base, dry-brushing seems to be frowned upon and woe betide you if your figures are not up to scratch. Above all ‘accuracy’ seems to be the watchword. While not decrying any of that, I still maintain that this hobby is supposed to be fun and it is the end result that matters – not how you achieved it. However, I do believe that the best dioramas should, as Shepard Paine (and many others over the last three decades) have taught us, ‘tell a story’.
The idea
After the initial title ‘Liberation’ came to me it struck me that that word has always meant different things to the various people caught up in conflict: a mixed blessing. For the (unscathed) victor there might be the feeling of satisfaction of ‘job done’, but also grief for dead and wounded comrades and wistful thoughts of a far-away home. For those civilians who had been ‘liberated’ there would be joy, but also grief for those lost and, all too often, horror at the destruction of their homes. For the surviving, but defeated enemy these feelings would be mostly negative, but perhaps also tinged with a relief of sorts…
The atmospheric photo below shows New Zealand infantrymen talking to civilians in Faenza (so nearer to the Adriatic coast) on 16 December 1944.
[ATTACH]301780[/ATTACH]
Initial inspiration came from the Sovereign Miniatures Wolf range: S2KW030 - British soldier smoking. I wasn’t familiar with SM until a year or so ago but they have a wide range of resin figures (and other items) divided almost equally between Allied and German subjects. They are also lovely guys who give hefty discounts at shows…
[ATTACH]301781[/ATTACH]
This guy is obviously having a bit of a ‘Hamlet moment’ (although it’s probably a woodbine): relaxing after a moment of combat with a quiet smoke where he seems to be worlds away from his surroundings. From his uniform he could be anywhere in Europe during the latter half of the Second World War – so I decided he was going to be in Italy in the summer of 1944, perhaps a veteran of the previous year’s fighting, possibly even the Western Desert before that. The idea is that he will be at the centre of the diorama (although perhaps not literally), with other little vignettes going on elsewhere.
I say ‘elsewhere’ because I already had an idea that I wanted this to be a fairly large project. Although it might be said to be foolhardy to kick-start my modelling in this scale with such a grand design, a large part of me wants to try out many of the new kits, materials and techniques I have been reading about in books, magazines and on the web.
So as I started to sketch the plan more elements soon came to mind:
So not much to accomplish there, I am sure you will agree…
For my ‘back story’ readers are directed to my posting in the Introduce Yourself section. The short version is that this is my first 1/35 project since I downed tools as a 16-year-old in 1984.
Those who followed me from the other site will know that this blog started almost two years ago. I’m going to start with a ‘redux’ of that blog to where it had reached in May 2018 and then carry on where I left off. So, my apologies for those who may have seen some of this before… The image above shows the diorama more or less in its current state.
The diorama is called Liberation, Italy 1944. It depicts a hill town (probably in Tuscany) soon after being over-run by the Allies during the advances which followed the liberation of Rome in June 1944 – so my setting is in the late summer / early autumn.
Just as it was with the public at the time, this has been a largely forgotten WWII subject for the modeller (at least compared with the plethora of Normandy / Eastern Front dioramas). The choice of an Italian setting was driven in part from reading two excellent books.
War in Val D'Orcia: An Italian War Diary, 1943-1944 by Iris Origo is a war diary written by an English-born woman who married an Italian aristocrat in the 1920s and lived on an estate in Tuscany throughout the Second World War. From her unique, local vantage point she witnessed the turmoil that enveloped the nation following the Allied invasion, the surrender of the Italian forces and the German occupation and recorded (in often harrowing detail) the effects on her community as the tide of war swept towards – and ultimately engulfed – them.
The second bookis Italy's Sorrow a Year of War 1944-45 by James Holland. Easily as good as anything by Anthony Beevor, it’s a very even-handed account of the latter half of the Allies’ notoriously slow, hard slog up the peninsula, full of first-hand anecdotes, character sketches and plenty of details to inspire.
It also helped that a couple of years ago we had a family holiday in Tuscany – the first time I have been to this beautiful part of the world. There is nothing quite like being where it happened to understand how to model a subject.
Like the Italian campaign, this has been a long haul, but if I can get it ready to show at Telford 2018 I will be happy. I have decided to aim for a competition less out of any lust for glory (who am I kidding?) and more for the added impetus that a deadline brings to any project. Like many of us, my modelling tends to come in fits and starts between family and work commitments…
Now I will be the first to admit that the bar for dioramas has been raised a country mile since those barmy days of the 1980s when I last modelled in 1/35. These days it is simply not enough to arrange a well-built vehicle on a tasteful base, dry-brushing seems to be frowned upon and woe betide you if your figures are not up to scratch. Above all ‘accuracy’ seems to be the watchword. While not decrying any of that, I still maintain that this hobby is supposed to be fun and it is the end result that matters – not how you achieved it. However, I do believe that the best dioramas should, as Shepard Paine (and many others over the last three decades) have taught us, ‘tell a story’.
The idea
After the initial title ‘Liberation’ came to me it struck me that that word has always meant different things to the various people caught up in conflict: a mixed blessing. For the (unscathed) victor there might be the feeling of satisfaction of ‘job done’, but also grief for dead and wounded comrades and wistful thoughts of a far-away home. For those civilians who had been ‘liberated’ there would be joy, but also grief for those lost and, all too often, horror at the destruction of their homes. For the surviving, but defeated enemy these feelings would be mostly negative, but perhaps also tinged with a relief of sorts…
The atmospheric photo below shows New Zealand infantrymen talking to civilians in Faenza (so nearer to the Adriatic coast) on 16 December 1944.
[ATTACH]301780[/ATTACH]
Initial inspiration came from the Sovereign Miniatures Wolf range: S2KW030 - British soldier smoking. I wasn’t familiar with SM until a year or so ago but they have a wide range of resin figures (and other items) divided almost equally between Allied and German subjects. They are also lovely guys who give hefty discounts at shows…
[ATTACH]301781[/ATTACH]
This guy is obviously having a bit of a ‘Hamlet moment’ (although it’s probably a woodbine): relaxing after a moment of combat with a quiet smoke where he seems to be worlds away from his surroundings. From his uniform he could be anywhere in Europe during the latter half of the Second World War – so I decided he was going to be in Italy in the summer of 1944, perhaps a veteran of the previous year’s fighting, possibly even the Western Desert before that. The idea is that he will be at the centre of the diorama (although perhaps not literally), with other little vignettes going on elsewhere.
I say ‘elsewhere’ because I already had an idea that I wanted this to be a fairly large project. Although it might be said to be foolhardy to kick-start my modelling in this scale with such a grand design, a large part of me wants to try out many of the new kits, materials and techniques I have been reading about in books, magazines and on the web.
So as I started to sketch the plan more elements soon came to mind:
- A church with bell tower and part of a typical Italian street
- A small ravine crossed by a bridge into the town
- A knocked out German tank or assault gun in front of the church
- At least two Allied vehicles entering the town, one a Bren carrier the other to be confirmed
- A German or Italian car crashed into the ravine, as if taking the bend at excessive speed during the retreat
- Allied troops (British, Canadian, Polish or Anzacs) in various states of emotion
- ‘Liberated’ Italians, also displaying mixed emotions
- Captured, wounded or dead German troops
So not much to accomplish there, I am sure you will agree…
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