Sabbath in the bush: West Shore artist crafts tribute sculpture to Ozzy
HESQUIAT PENINSULA, VANCOUVER ISLAND, BRITISH COLUMBIA, AUG 7 – West Shore artist Paul Lewis crafted a driftwood sculpture named Ozzy to honor the late Black Sabbath frontman, inspired by his grief on July 22, officials said.
- On July 22, West Shore driftwood artist Paul Lewis crafted a tribute sculpture named Ozzy on the remote Hesquiat Peninsula, naming it to honor Ozzy Osbourne.
- Paul Lewis felt grief hit when 'Mama, I’m Coming Home' by Ozzy Osbourne played after he learned of his death last month.
- By nightfall, Paul Lewis headed out with an electric drill and screws to work on his driftwood project, shifting from a different dinosaur idea after selecting a semi-fictional two-crested dilophosaurus online.
- Lewis saw the title as fitting for Ozzy’s 'Prince of Darkness' image, aiming to bring light amid darkness and warm passersby, he said.
- The remote setting highlighted the isolation of the solo artist, with Paul Lewis working alone and accessible only by helicopter as part of the Estevan Point Lighthouse restoration crew.
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