Gallery Home | Gallery Artist Archives | Submit your work

Cindy Vargas Continued ...

Vargas' interest in woodworking took an artistic, sculptural approach almost from the beginning. In high school, after a storm knocked over an elm tree in her family's backyard, she brought an elm log to school "and chainsawed it into abstract form," Cindy said. "It was a reductive process to find the form within the log. Embarrassingly, my parents still display it."

Woodworking was just one of many creative outlets for Vargas, her four sisters and brother. They were exposed to art at a young age, fostering an interest that carried over into their careers; the professions of Cindy's sisters are photographer, landscape designer, interior designer and graphic designer. "We had a lot of art exposure as kids, taking summer school art classes. My mom and dad love the arts and took us to many shows at the Walker Art Center and Minneapolis Institute of Arts," Cindy said. "It was just a natural talent and natural direction for us to go in.


Flower Cabinet

In college, Cindy attended the University of Minnesota and received a degree in anthropology. She then worked in administration at the University's Department of Orthopedic Surgery for 10 years. During that time she took numerous art classes at the university, including ceramics, sculpture and drawing.

In 1993, Cindy made the decision to pursue a career in the visual arts. She and her husband, Ron, moved to Portland, Oregon, where she enrolled at Oregon College of Arts and Crafts. There she received a bachelor of fine arts degree with concentrations in woodworking, furniture design and fiber arts. They then moved from Oregon to New York to Mississippi over a five-year period before landing in California. "I've had sort of a vagabond career," Cindy said. "I actually dragged my woodshop across the country each time. I keep joking that I'm just going to buy a Ryder truck and put a generator in it and set up my shop in there. I can set up and tear down a shop more efficiently than anyone I know." Now based in greater Los Angeles, Vargas lives in Pasadena and has a studio in Glendale. She shows her furniture at the Woodworker's Guild of Southern California gallery in San Pedro, where she recently finished work as curator of the guild's holiday show that ran through mid-December. She is currently collaborating with glass artist Dar Horn of Union Art Works gallery in San Pedro on uniquely-designed doors with art glass panels.

Cindy works about 10 hours a day in her 600 square foot workshop ("which is about half as much space as I want," she says), typically utilizing all the elements of her artistic background to create pieces.
"A lot of it is pretty sculptural," she said. "I use a lot of color in fabrics and paints -- mainly milk paints. Lately I've become more interested in exploring form, and less concerned with surface design. I'm not sure where it's going to take me."

The dance continues.

Cindy Vargas may be reached by e-mail or by phone at (626) 676-7841.

<<< back to previous page

Photographs courtesy of Cindy Vargas
Text by Keith Wandrei


Contact Us | Sign up for Email Updates | Home
Forum | Gallery | Woodworking Tips | Schools | Links | Shopping

Visit our Partner Sites:
Routermanina Woodworking Supplies and Hardware - Rockler Woodworking.com
Free Woodworking Plans - FreePlans.com Woodworker's Journal Woodworker's Journal eZine

Copyright 2009, Rockler Companies, Inc.