Chai Rachawat (Thai: ชัย ราชวัตร) is the pen name of Thai cartoonist Somchai Katanyutanant (สมชัย กตัญญุตานันท์, born 2 June 1941). One of the most popular and influential cartoonists in Thailand, his best known work is the political cartoonPhuyai Ma kap Thung Ma Moen (ผู้ใหญ่มากับทุ่งหมาเมิน), which appears in the daily Thai Rath newspaper.[1]
Biography
Somchai Katanyutanant was born to an ethnic Chinese family in Ubon Ratchathani Province on 19 June 1941. He graduated from Benchama Maharat School and studied at the Bangkok Business College because he wanted to work at the bank. After graduation, he worked at the Bank of Ayudhya. Not so long after he worked at the bank, he then resign from the work due to tiresomeness. Chai had an unusual path that led him to political cartoons. As a boy, he seemed like a perfect prospect to become a political cartoonist, because he had an interest in both politics and drawing cartoons.[2]
Printing industry
Chai Ratchawat begins his career in art department for Sport magazine name "The game" and start writing about political after the event on October 6, 1976. For the magazine he works for is Thongchai and (Thai: หนังสือมหาราษฎร์. His first comic about political was (Thai: ใครจะเอากระพรวนไปแขวนคอแมว). And because of this Chai has to move to Los Angeles and America for 2 years and back to Thailand and keep drawing and also write a story name (Thai: "ผู้ใหญ่มากับทุ่งหมาเมิน"in the Daily News and Thai Rath.
Political Role
That was a report that PDRC support Chai to become a committee of for people foundation or (Thai: มูลนิธิมวลมหาประชาชน) and the objective of this foundation is to help people who is a victim in the (Thai: การชุมนุมทางการเมือง) and for collecting money to reform the country.[3]
Award
Sriburapha Award in A.D. 2000
ศ.บำรุงสุข สีหอำไพ Award From Communication Arts, Chulalongkorn University in 2008
^Karuchit, Warat (2014). "The Uphill Climb to Reach a Plateau: Historical Analysis of the Development of Thai Cartooning". In Lent, John A. (ed.). Southeast Asian cartoon art : history, trends and problems. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. pp. 75–104. ISBN9780786475575.
^A. Lent, John (2014). Southwest Asian Cartoon Art History, Trends and Problems. Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania: mcfarlandbooks. pp. Part 1, 3rd Paragraph. ISBN978-1-4766-1446-5.