64 Colors
A Little Stranger
Aaron Brown
Angry Woebots
Arbito
Atsushi Honda
Aya Kakeda
Bert Gatchalian
Betso
Brent Nolasco
Bwana Spoons
Camilla d’Errico
Chuckboy
Clement Hanami
Cris Rose
D-Lux
Darth Rimmer
David Horvath
Yukinori Dehara
DrilOne
Edwin Ushiro
Elizabeth Ito
Fakir
Frank Mysterio
Gary Ham
Harpoon
Helena Garcia
J*Ryu
Jason Limon
Jeff Lamm
Jeni Yang
Jeremiah Ketner
Jesse Hernandez
Joe Hahn
Joe Ledbetter
Josh Herbolsheimer
Julie West
kaNO
Kat Brunegraff
Kio Griffith
Kiyoshi
Kohei Yamashita
Koji Harmon
Leecifer
Le Merde
Len Higa
Lou Pimentel
Luke Chueh
Luke Rook
Lunabee
Mari Inukai
Mark Nagata
Martin Hsu
Meat Bun
Miso
Nakanari
Nathan Ota
Nebulon5
Nick Arciaga
Noferin
Okkle
Oliver Hibert
Podgy Panda
Bob Conge – Plaseebo
Reactor 88
Rohby
Sarah Neyhart
Scott Tolleson
Scott Wilkowski
Shane Jessup
Shawnimals
Danni Shinya Luo
Spanky Stokes
Spencer Hibert
Squink!
Stasia Burrington
Tado
Tara Logsdon
Tiffany Liu
Tristan Eaton
UAMOU
Valerie Gudell
Yoskay Yamamoto
過去の展覧会
Giant Robot Biennale 3
Artists
Find out more about the Giant Robot Biennale 3 artists below.
Artists
Rob Sato
Los Angeles-based artist Rob Sato creates a sense of twisted nostalgia in viewers with his grotesque yet quietly beautiful watercolor paintings. In them, Sato intertwines the mechanical and organic elements that characterize his stark images of decay. These scenes—along with their historical influences—explore how old technology remains buried in the collective consciousness long after the objects themselves are gone. In 2005, Sato self-published his graphic novel, Burying Sandwiches, with the help of a Xeric Grant. Since then, he has continued to work and exhibit across the country, most recently in a two person show at Giant Robot 2 in Los Angeles.
Deth P. Sun
Deth P. Sun is a painter and illustrator currently living in Berkeley, CA. A visual storyteller inspired by the places he visits, Sun’s pieces send his characters on endless adventures through dangerous and foreign lands. Since graduating from the California College of Arts and Crafts in 2002, he has published several zines, including his recent alphabet collection entitled I See All. He exhibits 10-12 times a year throughout the U.S. and abroad, from Giant Robot in Los Angeles to New York. Additional illustrations of his can be found at Urban Outfitters, Poketo, The LA Weekly, and Nylon Magazine.
Ako Castuera
Ako Castuera is a painter, sculptor, and textile artist based in Los Angeles. Her latest pieces, primarily colorful watercolors and wild clay sculptures, draw inspiration from the relationship between humans and their environment. While working as a storyboard artist for the hit animated show Adventure Time, she developed her first solo exhibition—“They Are Us”—for Giant Robot 2 in April 2012. Her work has also been shown at Rowan Morrison Gallery in Oakland and Space 1026 in Philadelphia.
Eishi Takaoka
Eishi Takaoka is well known for his distinctive painted wooden heads that sit atop empty glass medicine bottles. Their outwardly serene expressions create the impression of eerie similarity, only belied by the colorful growths sprouting from their heads that give each a unique personality. For this collection, Takaoka draws inspiration from life in his hometown of Kagoshima, and the relationship between humans and nature. He has participated in both group and solo exhibits with Giant Robot, from Los Angeles to New York. In 2005, one of his pieces was featured on the cover of popular novelist Haruki Murakami’s Kafka on the Shore.
Sean Chao
Although raised in heavily urbanized Taiwan and currently working in Los Angeles, mixed media artist Sean Chao’s work is influenced by nature and the creatures that populate it. Drawing inspiration from his daily experiences, he creates narratives ranging from simple slice-of-life interactions to the more absurd. His dioramas combine the organic and mechanical elements of his environment to show moments frozen in time, yet full of movement. He has recently exhibited at Giant Robot’s Game Over and Disney’s WonderGround Gallery grand opening.
Saelee Oh
Saelee Oh is an illustrator currently living and working in Los Angeles. Her work primarily consists of drawings, paintings, and cut paper, as well as the occasional sculptural installation and stop-motion animation. Oh weaves a loose narrative with her work, creating settings and characters to explore how everything is connected. Her delicate and cheerful pieces often feature nature and dreamlike scenarios through a lens of female empowerment. After graduating with an Illustration degree in 2003 from the Art Center College of Design, she has exhibited in galleries across the US, as well as in the UK and Japan.
Zach Gage
New York City-based conceptual designer Zach Gage creates art that represent humanity’s gradual transition into the digital space. Through interaction with the viewer, the pieces take data and translate it into digital art—like a picture that deletes part of itself with every view. His work forces the viewer to consider the increasingly narrow divide between the digital and physical worlds within his or her own life. While deceptively simple, Gage shows the use and inherent value of data in both worlds. Currently, he creates indie games for Apple’s iOS platform. Gage’s work has shown internationally, from the Museum of Modern Art in New York to the Venice Biennale, as well as in several printed and online publications.
Albert Reyes
Los Angeles-based artist Albert Reyes has a distinctive style inspired by the juxtaposition of pop culture and classical high art. After graduating from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2001, his works have run the gamut from illustrations on recycled hardcover book covers to an elaborate maze built annually behind his house in El Sereno, CA. Reyes often incorporates real world elements in his work, with topics ranging from Hollywood icons to consumerism. His work has shown across the world, appearing in galleries from Paris to the Pacific Design Center in Los Angeles. Reyes has appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live and CNN.
Masakatsu Sashie
Painter and Kanazawa native Masakatsu Sashie is best known for his distinctive “orb paintings,” featuring large floating spheres covered in both Showa-era signage and remnants of modern culture. These self-contained cities, modeled after the town he grew up in, show a sense of nostalgia for the past amid their destroyed, apocalyptic surroundings. Sashie’s work rose to prominence in 2005 after being featured in Tokyo’s Geisai Art Show. In 2008, he made his North American debut with a solo show at Giant Robot 2 in Los Angeles. His work continues to spread across the globe, with pieces appearing in New York’s The Armory Show, and the 2011 Hong Kong International Art Fair.
David Horvath
David Horvath’s line of stuffed Uglydolls was born in 2001 from a simple drawing on a letter to his wife, fellow Parsons School for Design alumni Sun-Min Kim. From the very first batch sold at Giant Robot in Los Angeles, the plushes were a runaway success—with both children and adults. Their clean and unique design combines the best of both indie pop culture and the plush toy world. Horvath sees his creatures as empowering, meant to celebrate individuality and the benefits of being different. In 2006, the Toy Industry Association named Uglydoll the Specialty Toy of the Year. The company continues to flourish today with a line of vinyl figures, shelf space in over 2,500 stores, and plans to expand internationally.
Giant Robot Biennale 3 Artists
Downstream (2010)
Rob Sato
Ghost Ride (2010)
Rob Sato
Open End (2010)
Rob Sato
The Portal (2012)
Ako Castuera
I remember (2012)
Eishi Takaoka
hair (2012)
Eishi Takaoka
me (2012)
Eishi Takaoka
Detail of Doughnut Break (2012)
Sean Chao
Doughnut Break (2012)
Sean Chao
Blueprint (2012)
Sean Chao
Giant Cat Robot (2012)
Sean Chao
Detail of Catpaw Massage (2012)
Sean Chao
Good Heart (2012)
Sean Chao
Snipped (2010)
Saelee Oh
A Silver and a Slice (2010)
Saelee Oh