Thursday, July 14, 2016

The Pilgrym: Aseneth Levedescu, Cardinal of the Church of the Red Athenæum Finished!

The group is almost ready for Nottingham!

The penultimate model for the Church of the Red Athenæum is now finished!  As the largest model I created for the Church, Cardinal Aseneth Levedescu took considerably longer to paint than the others, but I am happy with the result.  And to go along with the pictures, my brothers and I wrote some background material for her, we hope you enjoy!




Aseneth Levedescu, (3rd) Cardinal of the Church of the Red Athenæum
Aseneth was born (840.M41) into the noble Levedescu family, a long line of renowned rejuvent chirurgeons of the Officio Medicae.  A haughty and vain lineage, House Levedescu was obsessed with physical beauty, pursuing it though politicking, eugenic breeding, and genetic and synthetic fleshcraft.  Much to the dismay of her parents, Aseneth was born as an intersex individual, exhibiting sexual anatomy not typically associated with a female.  Horrified that such an "aberration" could come from their cultivated gene pool, they used hormonal therapy and their surgical expertise to “correct” what they deemed a chance deviation.  This fact was not one that was widely known, but such was their hubris that when Aseneth was old enough to understand, her parents made it known to her. While they had hoped this knowledge would be a source of inspiration for her, showing her the power of her family’s craft, it only served to spark questions and sow doubt in her mind.  Why were they limiting their services to the nobility of Terra, when there were so many others that could be touched by their art, in particular the ever growing population of mutants in the underhives.  She was told that their time would be wasted on such abominations: Suffer not the Unclean to live, as the saying goes.  How was she so different from them, and why was she spared their fate?  If she had been given the opportunity, would she have given consent for the surgical procedures that “normalized” her? With these thoughts welling in her mind, she was drawn inexhaustibly towards her lineages’ profession.  She followed her parents’ wishes and became a chirurgeon trained under the auspices of the Officio Medicae.



Due to her throne, Aseneth took substantially longer to paint than her brethren.

With the influence and wealth of House Levedescu, she began her own surgical clinic, which was centered around reconstructive and rejuvent surgery, something she had been groomed for her entire life.  As her influence grew, she began to take her craft to the underhives in secret, performing corrective, phenotypic surgery on mutants.  Aseneth harboured a lingering sense of unease about the corrective surgery performed on her as a child, one that was further magnified by her work with the underhive mutants, but she felt it was the only way to help them to be accepted into Imperial society. This practice went on for many years, with her gaining much renown, albeit hidden from traditional medical circles, with some of her patients even incorporating themselves into the wider Imperium.  But it was not to last.

In time, word of her operation reached the wrong ears, and the ever-watchful Ordo Hereticus turned its gaze upon her.  Subtlety is not a virtue often employed by the Ordos, and within days, her clinic was stormed by a team of Adepta Sororitas.  Anyone who protested was executed, and any of her known patients, including those who had “infiltrated” into society, were rooted out and eliminated with extreme prejudice.  Aseneth's medical license was revoked, and she was put on a public trial and found guilty of “Abetting and conspiring with heretics and performing unsanctioned fleshcraft.” House Levedescu’s clout and influence within the Adeptus Terra spared her life, but her medial and political career was over, and she was cast as the black sheep of the Levedescu family.



Aseneth and her throne are covered in parchments, which I tried to paint scrollwork and text on.


While such an experience would have have crushed most individuals, it did the opposite for Aseneth. Instead of depleting her self-worth and shattering her illusion of control, the event gave her mental clarity; feelings and intuitions that she had always subconsciously held finally congealed into steadfast beliefs.  “Normalizing” people was wrong; they had never needed fixing.  The Imperium’s eugenic cleansing, under the guise of rooting out heresy, was nothing more than a yoke that was put in place by the High Lords of Terra, one based on superstition and fear.  The Imperium was a corrupt regime desperately trying to maintain an amoral status quo, one that was holding humanity’s future hostage.  She became convinced that such a state was not what the God-Emperor, silent on his hallowed Throne, would have espoused. 

While her family could offer her asylum, she deemed it a hollow existence, living on coattails hidden from the wider world.  Instead, she took matters into her own hands, disappearing into the underhives, a fact that House Levedescu accepted with little concern.  During her years  performing “corrective” surgery, Aseneth had heard word of an eccentric cult dedicated to the God-Emperor of Mankind, the Church of the Red Athenæum.  She was drawn to this church for two reasons, the first being its renouncement of the Ecclesiarchy as a corrupt organization, and the second being its curious practice of replicating the Emperor’s wounds as a form of reverence.  In acts of ritual self-mutilation, its members would mimic the wounds inflicted to their Savior by the Arch-Heretic, in an attempt to become closer to Him.  These acts of self-mutilation held a strange fascination for Aseneth, as she had suffered her own form of self-mutilation at birth, but not of her own volition. The allure of self-mutilation was one of voluntary ugliness:  while the beauty so prized by House Levedescu was a product of birth, by either nature or privilege, choosing ugliness was brutally egalitarian.  Furthermore, the Church’s focus on the Emperor's wounds resonated with her at a more personal level; just as the Emperor viewed the death of His sons as a harbinger of humanity's inevitable decay, she saw her involuntary surgery as the machinations of a corrupt regime intent on denying personal liberties and maintaining draconian control of the Imperium as a whole.



I spent a long time creating sigils for Aseneth, combining the Church's hourglass and the medical snake.

And with Remus Ormond, second Cardinal of the Church of the Red Athenæum, to bear witness, Aseneth inflicted her first wound in the Emperor’s name, cleaving off her left hand, and joined the Church (883.M41).  This was to be the first of many wounds she administered to herself, such was her fervor in her new faith.  Her vast medical knowledge was an unexpected, but welcome, boon to the ever expanding church.  Under her auspice, the Church was able to rapidly improve their medical and surgical techniques, dramatically reducing infection and mortality as a result of unsanitary ritual practices. 

With each passing year, Aseneth grew more and more influential within the Church.  As the chief medical officer and surgeon within the Church, she was intimately aware of its inner workings, and was acquainted with all of its members.  She was loved as much for her devotion to the Faith, as for her skill with a scalpel.  Few matched her passion for living a life committed to His suffering, yet none matched her scholarly fascination with religious texts.  Often she would spend hours deep within the dusty archives of the Red Basilica, studying treatises from the late Dorian Chandrakesan’s collection, like the Spheres of Longing, and even some fragmented writings of the Seer of Corrinto. This piety, and her insatiable yearning for knowledge, led her to becoming one of Cardinal Remus Ormond’s most trusted advisors.



The Kataphron Destroyers come on 60mm bases, which are quite large.  Cutting the little tiles out of plasticard was an ordeal, ha ha.

Therefore, when Ormond became fixated on “unlocking” his mind as an attempt to replicate a fraction the Emperor’s psychic trauma, she was one of his first consultants.  Although not trained in the finer points of neurology, she had more insight than most on the matter, and urged caution.  The biological facts underpinning psychic affinity were not well understood, and had largely stagnated in the culture of superstition that the Imperium was built upon.  Even basic neurobiology had not moved much beyond rudimentary neurografts for bionics and mind-impulse units since the coming of the Old Night.  When Ormond would not be persuaded from his course, she recommended various luminaries and texts he might consult.  But when these turned up fruitless, he called upon less savory advice, calling upon mystics, holistic healers, and esoteric techno-surgeons.  Eventually he stumbled upon a neurosurgical procedure from a decaying treatise pulled from the archives of a faded scholam. Ormond was convinced the operation, his Illumination, would unlock the latent psychic potential within his mind.  Although Aseneth expressed her concerns, she would not stand in the way of someone’s devotion to Him, and knew the Emperor’s light would guide His followers.  At the height of the Red Hour, he had the operation performed.

Only the Emperor, hallowed be His name, and Ormond himself know of the success or failure of the Illumination, for, upon its completion, Ormond was unresponsive, and the room rimmed with ice.  His body was entombed inside a life-sustaining casket, and sealed within the bowels of the Red Basilica, alongside his predecessor, the venerable Dorian Chandrakesan.  The period of leaderlessness was short lived, as Aseneth Levedescu was elected unanimously to fill Ormond’s role as spiritual leader of the congregation.  And thus began a new era for the Church of the Red Athenæum, one eschewing fatalism and demanding an active role in realizing an Imperium in the Emperor’s Vision.


- Adam Wier

10 comments:

  1. Absolutely stunning and this has definitely expanded the grimdark in both miniature and background as far as I'm concerned. Thank you for sharing this with all of us. It's been one the definite highlights of an extremely solid hobby year so far!

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    1. Thank you! I feel it is one of the best miniatures I have created recently, one that really pushed me in new directions.

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  2. Amazing model! And very interesting background.
    It's fantastic to see all the different skin-tones you have achieved on the different characters.

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    1. Thanks! I am glad you enjoyed the background too. I am also pleased you noticed/like the different skin tones; it was a goal of this project, to try to experiment with the group’s skin tones, thinking it better reflected the diversity of Terra.

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    1. Thanks! I agree! Soon I will need to create more members of the Order of the Crimson Hour. :)

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  4. Absolutely spectacular, man! I've thoroughly enjoyed seeing these come together and I am as always amazed at your kitbashing and sculpting - these look like they walked right out of a Blanche painting. Fantastic work!

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    1. Thank you for following us along the journey of building all the models for the Pilgrym Project. This is not the end of the Church though (or us creating elaborate conversions for that matter)! :)

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  5. So good. Some really interesting background enjoyed reading it.

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  6. Fantastic work. The skin tones of the model are just perfect. Love all the extra details and modifications done to the model as well!

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