The Great Toilet Seat Show and Auction was held at Eric Abraham's Flying Pig Studio and gallery from August 25 through
October 18, 2008. This was a successful fund-raiser for Lucas'
"bowl plaza", our soon to be constructed Public Rest room next door to the flying pig studio and gallery.
THE GREAT TOILET SEAT ART SHOW AND AUCTION!
Eric Abraham lives in his own world.
Abraham's ceramic sculptures are easily identifiable pieces of that world that serve as small gateways into his imagination. Sometimes they are melodramatic mirrors with bright colors, adorned with ornaments and animals. Sometimes they are intricately detailed fire-breathing dragons. Sometimes they are flying animals with funny hats.
But hardly any of it is straight out of reality.
"They're not too serious. They're fun, and I try to keep it a little tongue-in-cheek," Abraham, of Waubansee, Kan., said. "It's not something you see every five minutes."
Abraham isn't the type of person you see every five minutes either.
At roughly 5 and a half feet tall, with bright eyes, strong forearms and a bushy gray beard holding bits of the ceramic dust that covers his jeans, Abraham resembles a dwarf of Tolkien's creation, toiling away at his kiln. Other than a 17-year stay in Denver, Colorado, Abraham said he has never lived in one place for more than five years. He also claims to have seen a flying saucer, though he doesn't have an explanation for the phenomenon, and he has driven around the country in a 1950 Chevrolet school bus that has sometimes served as his home.
Abraham collects things, too. The loft of the schoolhouse he converted into his home holds numerous old radios dating from the 1930s to the '60s. In a back room of his studio are his National Geographic magazines -- he has nearly every issue from 1908 to the present -- and he also has an assortment of old cameras and soda bottles that lie around with the rest of the clutter with which Abraham surrounds himself.
Such characteristics make it easy to mistakenly label Abraham as an outsider artist. Though Abraham is an outsider art enthusiast, he is too aware and educated to truly fall into that category, said Jay Nelson, co-owner of the Strecker-Nelson Art Gallery.
"Nobody in the country is doing what he's doing with porcelain," he said. "It's a combination of what appears to be naive or outsider art with really good technical skills. So even though it looks somewhat naive, he has the skills and education to understand what he's doing."
Abraham received his bachelor of fine arts from the Kansas City Art Institute, and his Master of Fine Arts from the University of Nebraska.
He taught for two years at K-State before leaving under circumstances he says some people "may still be sore about." He worked at Hallmark Cards in Kansas City, Mo., in the mid 1960s, and he has been working in porcelain since 1985.
Abraham's art is witty and eccentric, while appealing to a young sense of humor, Nelson said. He pointed out a cup titled "There Have Been Allegations Made, and This is the Alligator," that prominently features an alligator as one example of the humor with which Abraham endows his art.
"His pieces are full of little jokes like that," Nelson said.
Nelson said the Strecker-Nelson has been showing Abraham's work for about 20 years now. When the gallery moved a year ago, Nelson said, one room was designed, from color to structure to lighting, specifically to display Abraham's work.
Of course, some people are apprehensive to pay for pieces that prominently feature flying pigs with hats. Abraham said people sometimes need authorities in art to tell them it is OK to buy the eccentric work.
As for the hats, Abraham said, it wasn't his idea.
"The pigs started wearing hats, and all the other animals decided they wanted hats, too," he said. "You know how children are -- 'Well, the pigs have hats, so I've gotta have a hat, too. I want one with a feather.' 'I want one with a propeller.'
"That's why they have hats. It wasn't my doing. They tell me what kind of hats they want."
Abraham said he became interested in art when he was a child, drawing pictures for the stories he liked since many of the illustrations were inadequate. That child-like approach still influences Abraham's work. He talked about his adoration of Will Rogers, Mark Twain and British author Arthur Ransome's books about children going off on adventures while avoiding their parents.
Abraham even illustrated "Peaceful Poems: Poems for Bedtime," a limited-press book of poems on display at the Strecker-Nelson.
"I've done a lot of things with fairy-tale themes, but I think they're just as much for adults' rooms," he said. "They're not primarily for children, and if it's for a child, it has to be a child that's not going to take it out and smash it."
In actuality, the structures of those pieces are especially influenced by Baroque and Rococo sculpture, Abraham said. The two eras were known for the exploration of the artists in realism and elegant, decorative beauty.
Nelson said Abraham struggled to be accepted in the art world, and now, with other artists and professors buying his work, that has been achieved. But his struggle for acceptance hasn't watered-down Abraham's style.
"Eric is an intellectual, an eccentric, and very independent, which is probably why he doesn't teach," Nelson said. "Teachers are expected to teach certain things a certain way, and he likes to go his own way." So Abraham works in his own way in a gutted double-wide trailer converted into a studio next to his house. Surrounded by half-finished projects and characters he has brought into existence, Abraham said he sometimes feels 5 years old when he's making art.
That's why it's no surprise Abraham values his active imagination.
Ceramicist Eric Abraham of Waubansee, Kan., talks about his art in the double-wide trailer he gutted and converted into a studio. Eric Abraham's work is displayed at the Strecker-Nelson Art Gallery. His ceramics feature fantasy themes and figures such as flying pigs adorned with hats.
Matt Elliott/Collegian