Thanks very much for the kind comments, guys. Much appreciated.
It is quite the unique piece and posed some unique challenges.

But I love depicting different surfaces on a model, and this one's got it all: 2 different kinds of stonework, funky, funky skin/flesh (and wounds too!), metal and timber (the latter being probably hampered the most by the fact that it's FDM-printed, but on the other hand the marks kinda work as woodgrain. Still required a ton of sanding.

This dude would have been a complete joy to break out the oil paints for, but I didn't have the time, so I went all-acrylic on this one. And less airbrush than one would think too.
The gentleman who I did this model for also gave me a creepy looking doll eye to see if it fits the empty eye socket. Which gave it yet a whole different look, but in the end just looked like somebody stuck a not-quite-fitting effect eye onto the model so in the end we decided not to go with that. Especially since the other, the 'blind' eye, looked very different as welll.
Despite some general misgivings about certain kinds of 3d-drawn figures, this one impressed me with two physical traits: This dude is stable. Not once he fell over despite him being a dude on two feet and huge. But the centre of gravity very cleverly rests right in the middle and on where the pelvic bone would be. Gives him excellent stability.
The other thing is that he is sized such that he JUST fits an IKEA Detolf glass cabinet's two lowerlevels. So you just have to remove the lowest glass divider and he goes right in there. Maybe just a coincidence, but the dude fits so well that I'm inclined to think that this is by design.