My first entry in the OWAC V is posted and things are well under way! As you may recollect from my previous post, there's a heavy folk horror aspect to this army, although this month I'm concentrating on some of the survivors of the ambush on the Cult - fallen knights who are scarred in more ways than one.
This approach is both an attempt to follow the Cult with an equally baroque army and a way of doing something a little bit different with the old Empire army list, which I used to consider slightly vanilla. By way of explanation - I remember the "new" Empire army being introduced in White Dwarf magazine some time in the 90's and being a little underwhelmed. It all looked suspiciously historical to my young eyes back then and to my young mind if it was historical and not WW2, it was a bit boring. If it was historical and wargaming - well it was even more boring! I realise the folly of my youth now as I gravitate in ever decreasing circles towards such things but back then if it didn't have hordes of Orcs and monsters, I wasn't interested. This unreasoning and subconcscious prejudice towards the Empire has carried on for some time though and the large tub of old Citadel Medievals and Fighters I amassed sat untouched for many years. I just couldn't get excited about painting up knights and men-at-arms, albeit in the fantasy colours of the Empire, lovely miniatures though they were.
In the vanguard of the weary column marched foot knights, the regalia and splendour of their devotion to the Order of the Cleansing flame dimmed by the grime and mire that clung to their once white robes. Yet the fire still burned in their eyes despite the spectre of defeat that hung over them.
So having gotten over the hurdle of not being that interested in painting the Good Guys, I had a plan! Make them evil - worse than the Cult even, or at least more nihilistic, ambivalent and morally vacant. As the old cliche goes - Man is the true Monster...
A plaintive whinny joined the despondent chorus as ranks of mounted knights rounded the bend in the road. They too, however, were but shadows. Gone was the gleaming armour and gaudily painted barding. Gone too was the bravado and swagger. Pitted metal and hardened eyes were all that were left of the flower of Imperial chivalry and Memento Mori now hung where once a lady's favour might have.
So - how to make Empire knights nasty? Well, the Knights of the Cleansing Flame, of Regiments of Renown fame, have always struck me as being a bit creepy in their own right - pretty much like all religious fanatics. The troopers' appearance is pretty evil looking too - I've seen them passed off rather convincingly as Dark Elf spearmen before! I figured I didn't really have to do much with them in terms of background, etc, other than give them a nice grimy paint job to reflect the long and rough campaign they've been on.
This was a good opportunity to try out and add a few new techniques to my repertoire. They got the usual zenithal highlight airbrushed on and the basic colours, thinned with glaze medium, blocked in. It was then time to go to town with oil paint washes (loads of fun cleaning off the excess with white spirit to leave what I wanted in the folds and creases on the model), as well as weathering with rust pigment, Typhus Corrosion, Ryza Rust and Vallejo Oiled Earth Wash. They also got the usual Liquitex yellow ink airbrushed on afterwards to suggest a bit of firelight from the lit torches.
I can't remember if their background is linked with the Monks of the Red Redemption, but it certainly is in my mind. As far as I'm concerned they're two sides of the same coin and I can't wait to get them on the table facing each other! NB - I actually already have at BOYL 2021 but it was Richard Irvine's Anti-Cult Cult and his version of the regiment I was facing. Great minds think alike! NB again! Turns out they are - Eroneous Balbadron, leader of the Red Redemption is a former Knight and cousin of Chronus, who formed the Avenging Knights of the Cleansing Flame in response to Bablbadron's treachery! Chronus is hell bent on tracking down the Redemptionists and his evil cousin, which fits rather nicely in to my theme!
As for the mounted knights in my collection, I had a slight dilemma. I had a small number of the old Knights of the White Wolf and a larger number of both old and "new" (yup 4th ed. is still new to me!) Knights Panther. So I figured I'd lump them all together, stick a load of skulls and chains on them, paint them up with a lot of weathering and rust and convert them all to the worship of Morr thanks to their harrowing experiences at the hands of the Cult and Gorice's Dragon! I had contemplated painting them all black with various scrolls with cheery messages like "Remember Thou Art But Dust", but figured they'd have little scope for such redecorating in the middle of a failed military campaign. Instead I experimented with painting over clear Crackle Medium that was still wet, and then blowdrying it to encourage the cracks. The idea was to suggest cracked and weathered paint on the horses' barding - this was over a metallic base coat that I had already weathered with Ryza Rust. It kind of worked - some places better than others! More Typhus Corrosion, rust coloured pigment and Oiled Earth Wash helped blend all the elements together, along with a good dollop of watered down Vallejo European Thick Mud (used on the bases) applied liberally to anywhere it might have spattered.
They were a lot of fun to convert - adding bits of chain, skulls on spikes and the like. I also had a cherub from Foundry Miniatures going spare so it seemed only right to swap his head for a skull and stick him on the end of a pole as a kind of totem!
Of course, the knights' conversion to Morr also allows me to pose yet again as a pseudo-intellectual and do things like quote Nietsche because I painted it (I wonder if anyone can spot the error though!) on my banner! Actually I copied it from this brilliant image that really captured the feel of the army that I was going for. It was only after studying it closer that I realised what the text said.
“God is dead. God remains dead. And we have killed him. How shall we comfort ourselves, the murderers of all murderers? What was holiest and mightiest of all that the world has yet owned has bled to death under our knives: who will wipe this blood off us? What water is there for us to clean ourselves? What festivals of atonement, what sacred games shall we have to invent? Is not the greatness of this deed too great for us? Must we ourselves not become gods simply to appear worthy of it?” Nietzsche -Die fröhliche Wissenschaft 1882
It all seemed to tie in with the idea of the knights "killing" the objects of their own devotion (their former Knightly Orders) to embrace the worship of Morr - their only remaining psychological crutch in the seemingly Godless world of Sylvania. Of course their worship of Morr is a slightly perverted one - they have gone beyond the idea of being protectors of the Dead from such malign influences as Necromancers and Chaos Demons, to regarding themselves as dead already and bent on vengeance and bringing more souls in to the embrace of Morr.
Kurt Todeswunch looked on impassively at the remains of his army as it passed along the road. The gaunt look of having cheated death and wishing it were not so haunted the face of nearly every face he studied. Kurt knew from the start that this had been a fool's errand, concocted by the enmity of his so-called patrons to be rid of him. Unfortunately, most of his men had now come to the same conclusion. As with all campaigns, things had started out promisingly. The trail of destruction and desecration left by the Chaos Cult they hunted had not been difficult to follow, and they had been brought to bay in an ideal site for an ambush. The Dragon had changed all that.
With most of his heavy ordinance in flames and the best equipped men unable to flee quickly enough to the safety of the forest, Kurt had stared in to the face of disaster. What few of his professional soldiery who had escaped the Dragon's wrath were shaken to the core, forced to lie still in those twilight groves until the victors had tired of making sport with the injured and wounded and moved on. They were ill equipped to act against such reckless hate and now they were all but lost.
Kurt's adjutant, Captain Lukas Heinriksen, had already lodged a formal complaint about the deportment of the surviving Knightly Orders. Fresh from the Imperial Academy at Altdorf and stuffed full of petty rules and military doctrine, Heinriksen was a constant thorn in Todeswunch's side. Even with the dissolution of his command, or perhaps even because of it, the man clung ever more desperately to his regulations. Kurt knew such inflexibility had no business on the battlefield.
True, there was some substance to his Captain's indignation. Having cast aside the devotion to their former Knightly Orders in favour of the worship of Morr, the Knights Panther and the White Wolves now resembled more the quarry they hunted, because of the trappings of death with which they had adorned their armour. Kurt felt that they had fallen further than his Captain could even comprehend - their nightly rituals were often punctuated by the proclamation, "We are saved by Morr!" They did not hold themselves up as protectors of the dead. They believed themselves dead already.
On a lighter note, I've decided to spruce the place up and create an improved scenic backdrop for my photos. The cliffs and painted background are still the same - we are still in Sylvania after all! - but I've replaced the sands of the Wasteland with the muddy forests of the aforesaid witch-haunted backwater of the Empire.
The pine trees didn't quite work out as I intended - I think the branches are a little short on the Woodland Scenics armatures for what I wanted to achieve. I may yet try again with another kit, although I'm quite happy with the dead tree effect these ones create.
As ever, I'll leave the last words (and title drop!) to my protagonist and Army General, Kurt Todeswunch...
Only the Knights of the Cleansing Flame had held fast to their beliefs in the face of near annihilation. Kurt was more inclined to ascribe this to a burning fanaticism rather than the noble bravery Heinriksen commended them for. Well no matter, thought the General wryly to himself - he could employ that just as well as the Knights of Morr's nihilistic death wish, and if it gave the men heart then all the better. He had more use for such unorthodoxy than parade ground niceties. After all, they were in a dire situation - forced on to the defensive and badly bloodied by a powerful and insidious foe on the battlefield, cut off in a hostile land and far from a home they were unlikely to be welcome in. There was not much hope to be had, other than a forlorn one...
14 Temple Ritterbruden 623 points
L10 Hero, heavy armour, shields, lances, hand weapons, standard, musician, barded warhorses
25 Knights of the Cleansing Flame 418 points
L10 Hero, L5 Hero, heavy armour, shields, spears, musician and standard
On to February, the shortest month! I shall have to try not to bite off more than I can chew as I've also taken on a small painting commission for a good friend, which needs to be painted for our next Warlords of Albion game at Foundry in March...
OWAC Blog - do check out the other entries - there's some amazing stuff!
As promising as last year's cult. Keep painting, this is really good!
ReplyDeleteThanks Jaeckel - must admit that I was sweating whilst contemplating what to follow the Cult with! XD
DeleteThere's something eerie about all of them, I believe you nailed the vibe. What a fantastic mix and result.
ReplyDeleteCheers Suber - glad you think so! That was exactly the effect I was after!
DeleteWhat ho Thantsants! Just a quick message to let you know that I have been a relatively recent (last 18 months I would say) convert to your blog and it has brought me immense joy reading your posts. I see you haven't posted in almost a year so A: I hope all is well, B: please do post again if you are able and willing, and C: if you have decided to all it a day please know that these posts and blogs have bought a lot of joy and I congratulate you for that! Cheers! Ted.
ReplyDeleteThanks Ted - first time I've checked in for a while. Been a few ups and downs this past year but all is good. I've some stuff in the bank to post and hope to get the blog going again in the near future so thanks for the polite nudge! Really glad you've enjoyed what you've found here so far!
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