Skip to main content
Article

Singapore’s Pioneer Cartoonists

Topics

Arts

1 October 2024

Cartoons today may be seen as kids’ stuff but many of the early cartoonists were ideologically motivated, and they drew cartoons to bring about social and political change.

(Clockwise from top left) Shamsuddin H. Akib, Liu Kang, Koeh Sia Yong, Tchang Ju Chi, Morgan Chua, Kwan Shan Mei, Dai Yin Lang and Lim Mu Hue, drawn by Koh Hong Teng. Images reproduced from Lim Cheng Tju, Drawn to Satire: Sketches of Cartoonists in Singapore (Singapore: Pause Narratives, 2023). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 741.595957 LIM).

(Clockwise from top left) Shamsuddin H. Akib, Liu Kang, Koeh Sia Yong, Tchang Ju Chi, Morgan Chua, Kwan Shan Mei, Dai Yin Lang and Lim Mu Hue, drawn by Koh Hong Teng. Images reproduced from Lim Cheng Tju, Drawn to Satire: Sketches of Cartoonists in Singapore (Singapore: Pause Narratives, 2023). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 741.595957 LIM).

Drawn to Satire: Sketches of Cartoonists in Singapore by Lim Cheng Tju and published by Pause Narratives in 2023. (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 741.595957 LIM).

Drawn to Satire: Sketches of Cartoonists in Singapore by Lim Cheng Tju and published by Pause Narratives in 2023. (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 741.595957 LIM).

Cartooning in Singapore

Cartoon Pioneers

金钱崖坠下的市民 (Ordinary Folk Suffering Under the Weight of Monetary Woes) by Tchang Ju Chi as published in Yehui, 20 December 1930. Image reproduced from Yeo Mang Thong, Migration, Transmission, Localisation: Visual Art in Singapore (1886–1945) (Singapore: National Gallery Singapore, 2019), 216. (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 709. 5957 YAO).

金钱崖坠下的市民 (Ordinary Folk Suffering Under the Weight of Monetary Woes) by Tchang Ju Chi as published in Yehui, 20 December 1930. Image reproduced from Yeo Mang Thong, Migration, Transmission, Localisation: Visual Art in Singapore (1886–1945) (Singapore: National Gallery Singapore, 2019), 216. (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 709. 5957 YAO).

带着光明来 (Arriving With Light) by Dai Yin Lang was published in Nanyang Siang Pau supplement, Wenman Jie (The World of Literature and Cartoons), 8 November 1936. Image reproduced from Yeo Mang Thong, Migration, Transmission, Localisation: Visual Art in Singapore (1886–1945) (Singapore: National Gallery Singapore, 2019), 177. From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 709. 5957 YAO).

带着光明来 (Arriving With Light) by Dai Yin Lang was published in Nanyang Siang Pau supplement, Wenman Jie (The World of Literature and Cartoons), 8 November 1936. Image reproduced from Yeo Mang Thong, Migration, Transmission, Localisation: Visual Art in Singapore (1886–1945) (Singapore: National Gallery Singapore, 2019), 177. From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 709. 5957 YAO).

Liu Kang captured the brutalities committed by the Japanese against the people of Singapore during the Japanese Occupation. One of the torture methods was to tie the victim to a chair and then poke sharp pencils into the victim’s ears, one pencil in each ear. Image reproduced from Liu Kang, Chop Suey, vol. 1 (Singapore: Printed at Ngai Seong Press, 1946). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RCLOS 959.5106 CHO-LK]).

Liu Kang captured the brutalities committed by the Japanese against the people of Singapore during the Japanese Occupation. One of the torture methods was to tie the victim to a chair and then poke sharp pencils into the victim’s ears, one pencil in each ear. Image reproduced from Liu Kang, Chop Suey, vol. 1 (Singapore: Printed at Ngai Seong Press, 1946). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RCLOS 959.5106 CHO-LK]).

Bala on the Moon was part of a set of 24 readers published by the Ministry of Education for the Primary Pilot Project in the early 1970s. The illustrations were provided by Kwan Shan Mei. Image reproduced from Bala on the Moon (Singapore: Educational Publications Bureau, 1974). (From PublicationSG).

Bala on the Moon was part of a set of 24 readers published by the Ministry of Education for the Primary Pilot Project in the early 1970s. The illustrations were provided by Kwan Shan Mei. Image reproduced from Bala on the Moon (Singapore: Educational Publications Bureau, 1974). (From PublicationSG).

“Sham’s Election Smile” by Shamsuddin H. Akib comprises cartoons reflecting the funny side of the 1979 by-election campaign. Source: The Straits Times, 6 February 1979 © SPH Media Limited. Permission required for reproduction.

“Sham’s Election Smile” by Shamsuddin H. Akib comprises cartoons reflecting the funny side of the 1979 by-election campaign. Source: The Straits Times, 6 February 1979 © SPH Media Limited. Permission required for reproduction.

这下包中 (1958) by Lim Mu Hue. Images reproduced from Lin Mu Hua, 林木化正华画集 (新加坡: 林木化, 1990). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RDTSH 759.95957 LMH).

这下包中 (1958) by Lim Mu Hue. Images reproduced from Lin Mu Hua, 林木化正华画集 (新加坡: 林木化, 1990). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RDTSH 759.95957 LMH).

A cartoon about increasing oil prices by Koeh Sia Yong, 1979– 80. Image reproduced from Koh Sia Yong, A Mirror of Our Times 1979–19 80: A Story in Cartoon (Singapore: K.S. Yong, 1995). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 741.595957 KOH).

A cartoon about increasing oil prices by Koeh Sia Yong, 1979– 80. Image reproduced from Koh Sia Yong, A Mirror of Our Times 1979–19 80: A Story in Cartoon (Singapore: K.S. Yong, 1995). (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 741.595957 KOH).

Morgan Chua’s illustration of Operation Snip Snip, which was launched in January 1972 to ban long hair on men. Image reproduced from Morgan Chua, Singapore: Sketches by Morgan Chua (Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Editions, 2008), 76. (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 959.57 CHU).

Morgan Chua’s illustration of Operation Snip Snip, which was launched in January 1972 to ban long hair on men. Image reproduced from Morgan Chua, Singapore: Sketches by Morgan Chua (Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Editions, 2008), 76. (From National Library, Singapore, call no. RSING 959.57 CHU).

Common Threads

Endnotes
Back to top