During the
Second World War, Hem worked for the
Plaek Phibunsongkhram government, producing nationalist propaganda illustrations for textbooks. When the war ended he went back to freelancing and wrote an illustrated series of ghost stories, inspiring many Thai artists. Among students who sought him out was cartoonist
Payut Ngaokrachang. Among Hem's works is
An Introduction to Phra Aphai Mani, a 1952 English-language book by Prem Chaya (Prince
Prem Purachatra) and illustrated by Hem. It serves as an introduction to the epic poem by Thai writer
Sunthorn Phu. His old student Payut would go on to create Thailand's first cel-animated feature film,
The Adventure of Sudsakorn, based on Sunthorn Phu's work. Another famous Thai epic poem,
The Story of Khun Chang Khun Phaen, was also translated by Prem Chaya and illustrated by Hem, in the 1950s. A series of Hem's illustrations for the poem
Lilit Phra Lo was published in 1963. Much later, film director
Wisit Sasanatieng paid tribute to Hem's ghost stories with his 2006 film,
The Unseeable. The Barom Khru Foundation, which claims to supervise Hem's works, issued a statement warning the film's producer
Five Star Production not to violate the copyright of Hem's writing. The director countered that
The Unseeable was not an
adaptation but was generally inspired by Hem's style of writing and illustrations. Before his death in 1969, Hem was engaged by King
Bhumibol Adulyadej to create oil paintings that would be given as gifts to royal visitors.
Notes ==References==