I just came back from a little holiday in Gotha in Thuringia. It is where Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, husband of Queen Victoria, came from. And they have a nice castle and a museum there, which shows among other things a number of wonderful cork models of ancient, in particular Roman, monuments:
Credits: Michael Sander / WikimediaCommonsSo back to modelling!
As I said earlier, I wanted to have several statues in the diorama. There are certain figure poses that make quite convincing statues, and the trick is simple, of course: just paint them like stone or metal (e.g. bronze). But I wanted to have a range of different sizes, as would be plausible for the art collection of such a villa: life-size, but also some statues smaller or larger, resp., than life. Thus I needed something else besides just 1/72 figures. The picture shows some examples, from left to right:

1. A wonderful little Bacchus, about 75 % of life-size, I think. This was among the last figures sculpted by Leonardo Torricini before his sad and premature death; he had created a range of ancient deities. And definitely from my last order that I sent to him, so I hope I can do this rare figure justice with my painting skills.
2. An obvious choice: A guy from the old Atlantic set “Greek Army”. Sculpting and mold of this almost 50 years old set are still good, even by modern standards, but the poses are absurd – useless on the battlefield, as if they were specifically made to end as sculptures…
3. A figure almost twice the natural size, from Erik Trauner’s fantastic set of ancient busts and statues (Nikolai ACC 03). Perhaps also a rare figure today, I have no idea if this set is still available.
4. A guy in 28 mm from the “Gangs of Rome” game. Usually, I'm not making dioramas in 28 mm scale, but I have bought some of those figures with this use as over-sized statue in mind.