Thank you all of you guys, for the kind words.
First I have to apologize for my long silence. The reason is that a year ago, I accepted a regular job and got stuck in the 'real world'.
I thought I could sculpt on the side but the job took most of my time. Now that the dust has settled a little bit, I'm back on the figure front albeit not as active as I would like.
About the figure, like John W. said it's in 120mm.
The main reference for the figure is a long series of articles by Bob Marrion about the Boxer Uprising published in Military Modelling in the last century. Other sources included contemporary photographs of life in China and of course the obligatory movie '55 Days At Peking' but especially 'The Sand Pebbles' – the nod from Nick Majerus, a true film buff – a lesser-known but much better picture in which the depiction of the Chinese 'side' is much closer to the reality although the action took place some 30 years after the Boxer Rebellion.
The figure depicts a soldier of the Imperial Army ca 1900. China being a very large country, there was no uniformity among the many factions which composed the Army, each one with its own distinctive 'uniforms' and weapons.
The dress generally consisted of adapted civilian clothing with a jacket ('ma-gua') with a circular panel front and back serving to identify the soldier's regiment (characters on the panel read 'Red Unit Braves').
The hairstyle is typically Manchu (shaved brow and long queue). The ponytail is worn wrapped around the neck in martial art custom (a nod to Jet Li movies).
Firearms were of European makes, German Mausers or British Martini-Henry like on the figure.
I always wanted to sculpt a Boxer since I saw Mike Good's figure way back when. It was the first time that I realised that a realistic, non-caricatural face with non-Caucasian features can be done. Thank you, Mike for the inspiration.