Tsai Chih-chung
Tsai Chih Chung (Chinese: 蔡志忠; pinyin: Cài Zhìzhōng; born 1948) is a famous cartoonist born in Huatan, Changhua County, Taiwan.[1] He is best known for his graphical works on Chinese philosophy and history, most notably the philosophers Laozi, Liezi, and Zhuangzi, which he made accessible and popularized through the use of plain language and visual aid of cartoon graphics.[2] Many of his earlier four paneled works contain elements of political satire and those which are purely comical such as his well-known work, The Drunken Swordsman (大醉俠).[1]
The books of Tsai Chih Chung have been very well received by the public in both Taiwan and mainland China. They have subsequently been translated into dozens of languages including English.[2] He currently resides in Taiwan and Hangzhou, China.
Awards
- 1979: Golden Horse Film Festival and Awards for his work on Old Master Q (老夫子)
- 1985: The 23rd "Republic of China's Ten Outstanding Young Persons" (中華民國十大傑出青年) for his graphical work on Zhuangzi (莊子說)
- 1999: Prince Claus Award for "Creating Spaces of Freedom"[3]
Suffering from the poison of pseudoscience
Poisoned by Lee Si-chen's pseudoscience, in the 東方宇宙三部曲. Self-Inflation, its content is full of errors (including but not limited to confusing the Doppler Effect with Relativistic effect)
See also
References
- Das Tao Te King des Laotse: Gezeichnet und interpretiert von Chih-Chung, Tsai
- Prince Claus Awards, Tsai Chi Chung: Cartoonist: Chang Hwa, Prince Claus Fund for Culture and Development
- Prince Claus Awards 1999, archived from the original on 2010-12-20