Banner of Art and Food Market photo by Co-editor-in-chief Daniel K. Hargrove
Johnny, owner of Bstill clothing gives a quick salute photo by Co-editor-in-chief Daniel K. Hargrove
Simchayah Mawasi, owner of Motherland Vibrations, provided African garments photo by Daniel K. Hargrove
Digital illustrations of cartoons photo by Co-editor-in-chief Daniel K. Hargrove
Gus made a special guest appearance at the Art Market photo by Co-editor-in-chief
Jazz performer Lenny Green prepared to add music to the scene event photo by Daniel K. Hargrove
A Vega Metals Inc. sign hangs outside the metal forging company's business photo by Co-Editor-in-chief Daniel K. Hargrove
Cecilia Henaine De Davis trys on her newest aluminum necklace photo by staff photographer Autavius Smith

Jewelry maker brings big idea to Northeast Central Durham

September 22, 2017

A bronze colored five-foot horse statue made from scrap metal pieces sits at the intersection of Rigsbee Avenue and Hunt Street located in Northeast Central Durham. Further down Hunt Street is a perfectly noticeable sculpture with a scarlet silhouette of three people peddling on unicycles. Placed near the side building backdrop of two men forging metal is another metal statue of a rooster standing on the extended arm of a woman.

These few visual aspects only tell a mere fraction of what goes on at Vega Metals Inc.

“It’s like taking something from the past and putting it into the modern-day world and trying to make a living out of it,” Carlton said one Thursday afternoon.

The former tobacco barn turned creative-friendly art gallery opened its doors in 1987 by way of a reconnected high school friendship between Francis Vega and Neal Carlton in 1981. The two blacksmiths designed architectural metalwork furnishings over the years, going on to be recognized in numerous trade publications and winning international awards.

Its bestseller and signature metal design, the butterfly bench has continued to sell year-round to warmer climate states and can also be seen at Duke Children’s hospital.

“We’ve had a lot of people try and copy our butterfly bench. It’s a popular piece,” said Carlton. “The benches are all over the country – they can do it pretty much, they can do the cutwork on the wings, they can get it pretty close to this by looking at a picture.”

Carlton said only a “knowledge in blacksmithing” can figure out how to exactly remake its uniquely attractive carvings.

After the loss of Francis Vega in 2013, his wife Cindy Vega along with Neal Carlton (co-owners) have been on the receiving end of an increasingly supportive community and many passionate ideas.

A few of those ideas can be traced back to 1999, a persistent self-taught jewelry maker who wanted to run a gallery – little did Carlton and Vega know how much that person, Cecilia Henaine De Davis, would expand the business.

“She wanted to run a gallery here and we wanted to start one and didn’t have the energy or passion to do it,” said Carlton. “Her energy and fire has led to so many beautiful things in downtown from the food trucks being down here every Saturday in conjunction with the Farmers Market.”

Cecilia Henaine De Davis is the coordinator of the art market that she helped put together with Vega before he passed. Held every Saturday from 7:30 am to around noon, artists, vendors, and live performers gather on a sectioned off Hunt Street to showcase sundry homemade items.

Whether it’s crochet knit bunnies, pocketbooks, talking sticks, specialty tea, or birdhouses, the art market has served as a prevailing platform for those looking to just make something and share exploratory creations.

“You have to find a way. And that’s how I was always telling them. Find a way to do something that distracts you, and create something that will help you to be able to survive at the moment,” Davis said.

Davis credited her improved English and communication to the transcending moment five years ago where she worked with a women’s group of incoming domestic violence survivors.

The half Mexican and Lebanese avant-garde worked on an aluminum necklace as she described her time at Casa De Esperanza, a Latina oriented shelter in Minnesota.

“I was injecting them with a lot of good information,” said Davis.  “Unfortunately, I was suffering from a young age, feeling the pain that a lot of kids feel when their parents are not good to them.”

As the vast differences in culture shifted within the shelter, Davis organized jewelry making workshops for women to have an outlet to cope with emotional distress.

“I need to do something, I need to deliver the information to the Latinas, all people for them to be able to survive,” Davis recalled.

Davis relocated to Durham with her husband in 1999, saw the lack of shelters and began work at a long since then closed Latina shelter in Carrboro.

“I was so hungry for family, my status wasn’t finalized, and my mother-in-law and all my husband’s family was here,” Davis said.

Now at 214 Hunt Street, her role as a jewelry maker has grown to ultimately give Durham residents a space to be and see productive citizens.

“If not for Mrs. Cindy and Cecilia there would be nothing to do,” said Lenny Green, who has been performing live blues at the art market for seven years.

Green, also known as “Mojo Hand” continues to show his allegiance to Vega Metals art gallery because of the well-received feedback every weekend.

“I get so many accolades from the people thanking me for the music I choose but to see people dance, clap their hands and stomp their feet is the line at infinity for me,” Green said.

This story was originally posted in the the Durham Voice.

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