Wirraway
Which got me thinking, if modelling is an art form, as most of us consider it to be, why is it modellers never get antsy about someone else copying their work. You can bet that if it was a painting, essay or piece of music, the original author would be screaming blue murder.
It's probably for the same reason that in Music you can't copyright a chord pattern. You can't copyright, for instance. Am, AmM7, Amy D/F#, FM7 g Am.--the chords to Stairway to Heaven. BUT--
if you pick it in the same pattern and sequence as Jimmy Page did, you are committing "plagiarism". The same chord pattern appears, by the way, in the chorus of "Something" by the Beatles; in the introduction of "Nobody Home" by Pink Floyd, and in a more indirect way, in the beautiful ballad "If" by the band Bread.
The vi, V, I, V (6m,4,1,5) chord pattern is behind the choruses of each one of these hit songs, albeit in different keys:
San Francisco--Scott McKenzie
Peace of Mind--Boston
Save Tonight--Eagle Eye Cherry
It's My Life--Bon Jovi
Misunderstood--Bon Jovi
Complicated--Avril LaVigne
Why Can't I Breathe--Liz Phair
....and countless other hit songs and never-heard-of tunes & songs as well. The key thing here is "interpretation".
I have to admit--if I saw someone doing a rusted-up Chevy Nomad in a field with bunnies running around it, my first thought would be..."Hmmm?!" But then I would recognize the influence, and be flattered by the interpretation of it.
I don;t think you'd be "plagiarizing" at all if you built the same diorama. After all, it's not like there was one sole Field Kitchen ever fielded in WWII in the German Army. Change a detail here or there, maybe use a different camo scheme or layout of the tools or soldiers in the scene. That's your "interpretation". And you have every creative, legal, and moral right to it.