Illustrated book cover on tan toned paper of a large green robot in front of GR2 Gallery with many post it notes overflowing all through the street. Various GR Merch is held up in the scene.
Page excerpt, featuring a grid of photos taken of people singing Karaoke with names and song choices under their picture.
Page excerpt, featuring a grid of photos taken of people singing Karaoke with names and song choices under their picture.
Page excerpt, a long article about the Huy Fong Foods Inc with information gathered from a factory tour and interview with the owner.
Page excerpt, a long article about the Huy Fong Foods Inc with information gathered from a factory tour and interview with the owner.
Page excerpt, featuring photographs of a group of people sampling different sauces and a written list of their descriptions and rankings.
Page excerpt, featuring photographs of a group of people sampling different sauces and a written list of their descriptions and rankings.

Giant Robot: Thirty Years of Defining Asian American Pop Culture (Hardcover)

Regular price $ 49.95


\Hardcover, 464 pages, measures 8.3 x 11 inches, full color.

Each copy comes with a signed bookplate by Eric Nakamura! 

In conjunction with the great Drawn & Quarterly, we present Giant Robot: Thirty Years of Defining Asian-American Pop Culture, a hardcover curated collection of Giant Robot's best! Jam packed with so many great articles written by + interviews conducted by the passionate and creative Giant Robot contributors throughout the years. A beautiful hardcopy encapsulation of an era that lives on today!  

Description from Drawn & Quarterly:

Celebrating the pop culture phenomenon that redefined what it meant to be Asian American with tributes from Margaret Cho, Randall Park, Jia Tolentino, and more.

Los Angeles, 1994. Two Asian American punk rockers staple together the zine of their dreams featuring Sumo, Hong Kong Cinema and Osamu Tezuka. From the very margins of the DIY press and alternative culture, Giant Robot burst into the mainstream with over 60,000 copies in circulation annually at its peak. Giant Robot even popped right off the page, setting up a restaurant, gallery, and storefronts in LA, as well as galleries and stores in New York and San Francisco. As their influence grew in the 90s and 00s, Giant Robot was eventually invited to the White House by Barack Obama, to speak at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design, and to curate the GR Biennale at the Japanese American National Museum.

Home to a host of unapologetically authentic perspectives bridging the bicultural gap between Asian and Asian American pop culture, GR had the audacity to print such topics side-by-side, and become a touchstone for generations of artists, musicians, creators, and collectors of all kinds in a pre-social media era. Nowhere else were pieces on civil rights activists running next to articles on skateboarding and Sriracha. Toy collectors, cartoonists, and street style pioneers got as many column inches as Michelle Yeoh, Karen O, James Jean, and Haruki Murakami.

Giant Robot: Thirty Years of Defining Asian American Pop Culture features the best of the magazine’s sixty-eight issue run alongside never-before-seen photographs, supplementary writing by long-term contributing journalist Claudine Ko, and tributes from now-famous fans who’ve been around since day one. Margaret Cho, Daniel Wu, and Randall Park celebrate Giant Robot’s enduring legacy alongside pioneering pro-skateboarder Peggy Oki, contemporary art giant Takashi Murakami, culinary darling Natasha Pickowicz, and critically acclaimed essayist Jia Tolentino.