The later 1990s saw the start of a renewed larger scale interest in tiki from a variety of sources, the main being simply based on the curiosity of a new generation whose
Woodstock parents had rejected tiki as old and "square", but for their children was something new to be appropriated and repurposed. This began with people like Bosko Hrnjak, who had been raised in California's San Gabriel valley among its tiki inspired architecture and who in the mid-1990s began to carve large palm logs into tikis for his home bar. He became an influential artist known for his burnt wood carving style and making of homemade tiki mugs, an early catalyst for getting tiki's revival off the ground. Another early artist of the revival period was
Tiki King from the Santa Cruz mountains. He was inspired by his artistic parents and a large tiki given to his family by his surfer uncle. He became known for carving tiki necklaces and starting a mail order tiki business in the early 1990s. Also towards the end of the century saw a renewed interest in trying to "authentically" recreate older drinks. Jeff "Beachbum" Berry released several drink books starting in 1998 (the
Grog Log,
Intoxica, and others) that contained researched recipes for many of the signature drinks from the sometimes shuttered bars of previous decades. This was also the beginnings of the "urban archeology" aspects of 21st century tiki culture, based on historical interest and fueled by the "puzzle solving" of trying to discover secrets from the past from a cultural theme that was based in part on the "exploration" of tropical regions. Soon after also came the influential
The Book of Tiki by Sven Kirsten in 2000. Before that, Otto Von Stroheim had been self publishing a '
zine called
Tiki News that helped provide critical mass for books like Kirsten's to be made. Berry created two cocktails named after both Kirsten and Stroheim for their early contributions to tiki's resurgence in his historical drink guides. In 1995 tiki websites began to grow on the internet; in 1995 Exoticon, a convention of tiki art and exotic music, drew over 1500 people in Los Angeles including local celebrities such as
Mark Mothersbaugh and
Matt Groening. Non-themed bars also started placing tiki drinks on their menus, signaling a broader acceptance of the genre while also engendering discussion over what qualified to be called an "authentic" tiki bar. Interest in tiki had also proliferated overseas, with ''The Book of Tiki's'' Sven Kirsten hailing from Germany where a tiki subculture is strong. In 2017 noted tiki historians Sven Kirsten, Jeff Berry, Martin Cate, Brian Miller, and Chris Osburn listed their top 15 operating tiki bars in the world, which included four from London, one from Munich, one from Tokyo, and one from Barcelona.
Lowbrow movement In California and elsewhere, the re-exploration of
rat rod and
Hot rod culture melded with tiki, tattoo history, and rockabilly music to create new cultural hybrids such as "
lowbrow" that manifested itself in music, art, and a new breed of tiki bars.
Rockabilly artist
Brian Setzer released his album
The Dirty Boogie in 1998, featuring retro tiki bar images on its cover.
Taboo: The Art of Tiki was released in 1999, with artists such as
Mark Ryden and
Shag also employing tiki imagery in retro eclectic paintings.
WFMU's on-line channel "Sheena's Jungle Room" plays exotica music as part of its mix of "all things Lowbrow". Psycho Suzi's Motor Lounge opened featuring motifs of tattooed hula girls sporting
suicide rolls. It describes itself by saying: "We take lovingly-remembered tiki bar history, a healthy helping of tattoo culture, several measures of kitsch, a dash of voodoo and a passion for good times, stick them all in a blender and hit Liquify". The popularity of modern Western tattooing already had its roots in the South Pacific, but a
resurgence in tattooing saw popularity with tiki-related tattoos. Sailor Jerry Rum, named after legendary tattoo artist
Norman Collins, was introduced and marketed in part to be used in tiki drinks.
Tiki Art Now!: A Volcanic Eruption of Art was published in 2004 with an introduction by Otto Von Stroheim. Art galleries held Tiki Art shows, highlighting the works of artists such as
Sunny Buick, Heather Watts, Derek Yaniger, Flounder, and Tiki Tony. Lowbrow also spawned
Tiki Noir, a literary subgenre of hard-boiled crime fiction in a tiki setting, in which the main character is often a world-weary and deeply flawed detective.
Ritual of the Savage by Jay Strongman and the comic
Hawaiian Dick are two examples.
21st-century cultural events The rise in popularity for traditional tiki drinks also took hold in the
craft cocktail movement, as well as within certain "retro culture" circles that were associated with it such as with
Hipsters. Switching tiki drinks back to their original fresh juice origins, which had turned towards more artificial syrups during tiki's decline, helped to give the drinks a new reputation. The craft cocktail movement also saw drink experimentation that moved beyond rum and gin, highlighting tiki cocktails that were made with American whiskey and other different base liquor ingredients. Duke Carter's catalogue of historical tiki mugs,
Tiki Quest, was published in 2003.
Goodwill stores and thrift shops saw dusty tiki mugs suddenly whisked off their shelves, becoming stock for new home tiki bars and period-authentic sets for
Blast from the Past and
Mad Men. The pioneering video podcast
Tiki Bar TV started in 2005, highlighting drink recipes such as the Suffering Bastard and the Boomerang while filling tongue in cheek "prescriptions" for modern day maladies with tiki cocktails. It garnered attention from the Apple Corporation.
Tiki Magazine was launched, and large tiki-themed conventions began being held. Annual events include Tiki Oasis in San Diego started in 2001 by Otto and Baby Doe von Stroheim; the Hukilau occurs in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and was started in 2002 by Tim "Swanky" Glazner and Christie White in association with the Mai-Kai restaurant. In 2005,
Robert Drasnin was invited to perform at The Hukilau, his show consisting of selections from his 1959 album
Voodoo, as well as new material that would form the basis for the release of
Voodoo II almost a half century later in 2007.; Tiki-Kon started as the NW Tiki Crawl in 2003, and takes place in Portland, Oregon.
Tiki Caliente in Palm Springs. The Ohana: Luau at the Lake takes place in Lake George, NY at the Tiki Resort hotel. It is put on in conjunction with The
Fraternal Order of Moai, a tiki-themed social club formed in Ohio in 2005. Inhuele is hosted in Atlanta, GA every January. The same organizers also produce an Atlanta tiki home-bar crawl. A remake of
Thor Heyerdahl's 1950 documentary was filmed using two languages and turned into a major motion picture in 2012 with the release of
Kon-Tiki. The documentary
Bosko and the Rebirth of Tiki was released in 2018. ==Critical reception==