Giant Robot Store and GR2 News

  FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – Craft Event Make A Button Evening with Busy Beaver Button Co. Thurs June 9 6-8pm GR2 2062 Sawtelle Blvd. Los Angeles, CA 90025 http://giantrobot.com (310) 445-9276 Giant Robot and Busy Beaver Button Co is proud to host Make a Button Evening with well known button maker, Christen Carter, proprietor of Busy Beaver Button Co, Chicago.Christen Carter will bring her 2.25″ button maker. You can draw, bring in scraps or see what’s possible to do on a button! It’s free and all done on the spot. Giant Robot was born as a Los Angeles-based magazine about Asian, Asian-American, and new hybrid culture in 1994, but has evolved into a full-service pop culture provider with a shop and gallery in Los Angeles, as well as an online equivalent.
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That’s Jeni Yang, Giant Robot Drawing Club guest who actually made cookies for the event. GR Drawing Club opened at 6pm and continued late into the night. We’ll be announcing the next GRXDC event soon, and everyone of any age is welcome. We hosted children through adults. The idea is to just sit and draw without pressure and in a comfortable environment. We played music – this time, mostly 60s and 70s rock, yes, bring a record, and we’ll play it. We expected a tiny group but ended up setting up three tables! Great job, everyone. Cam Floyd and Niv Bavarsky just showed up! [nggallery id=17]
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – Group art show opening Blithe Spirits: New work by Sean Chao and Inés Estrada June 11 – June 29th, 2011 Reception: Saturday, June 11, 6:30 – 10:00 pm GR2 2062 Sawtelle Blvd.Los Angeles, CA 90025 http://giantrobot.com (310) 445-9276 Giant Robot is proud to host Blithe Spirits, a joint art show featuring new work by Sean Chao and Inés Estrada. Sean Chao is a Los Angeles based artist from Taiwan. Chao sculpts, paints, and delicately constructs a world filled with curiosity and amusement through creatures and nature. The Mixed-media pieces capture odd moments frozen in time. They hint at a narrative and create an imaginary history. His latest works are inspired by automobiles and nature. Humor is one of the key ingredients in his work. Chao combined and created a world that automobiles and nature can co-exist without pollutions. He plans to have 10 to15 small to medium size pieces of sculptures and drawings. Inés Estrada has lived in Mexico City for as long as she knows. She likes working with any materials she has at hand, as long as the result is colorful and messy. Her work is spontaneous and has no meaning other than you, the viewer, would like to find in it. She also likes making things with her partner Roi, and together they are Café con Leche, name under which they create comics, drawings, songs, sandwiches and plushie bastard children. Giant Robot was born as a Los Angeles-based magazine about Asian, Asian-American, and new hybrid culture in 1994, but has evolved into a full-service pop culture provider with a shop and gallery in Los Angeles, as well as an online equivalent. An opening reception for the artists will take place from 6:30 – 10:00 pm on Saturday, June 11, 2011. For more information about Chao, Estrada, GR2 or Giant Robot, please contact: Eric Nakamura Giant Robot Owner/Publisher eric@giantrobot.com (310) 479-7311
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Ryan McGinness glances and makes eye contact to a question asker, during his entertaining and informative lecture at Giant Robot 2 on Friday, May 27th, 2o11 as part of his 2011 Los Angeles Tour. McGinness and his staff graciously added Giant Robot to his schedule of events and on a calm Southern California friday evening and night, his fans and passers by enjoyed gr/eats made BBQ Chili dogs and Chili burgers, an outdoor projection of a “vintage” McGinness animated video, lecture, and a signing of his books and products. One of our favorite pages captures nearly everything. On the left side, something akin to a butterfly. It’s part of McGinness’s “pretty” imagery, but at the same time, it’s juxtapozed by the “balls” to add masculinity. The bottom left appears to be a sketch for one of his large scale paintings which we learned isn’t orchestrated necessarily by the exact placing of each “icon” screen, but more so as a whole. McGinness did seem to be in a place to perhaps explore the placement of each screen in the future. On the right, a tape cassette that says “Love”, and it’s being torn apart. It’s a sad image. McGinness is often designing buttons, t-shirts, and products which are often never made. They live in his sketchbook. Images from his sketchbook lived on the window at Giant Robot 2 throughout the weekend. [nggallery id=16]
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