Rafty was born in Paddington, Sydney into a family of Greek origin. As a boy he first started drawing caricatures while caddying during the Depression.[1]
Rafty caricatured politicians, sportspeople, and entertainers. He sketched sportsmen and women at every Olympic Games from 1948 (in London) to 1996 (in Atlanta).[5] His work has been exhibited worldwide and over 15,000 of his caricatures have been featured in newspapers and magazines. In 1981 Rafty became the world's first caricaturist to have subjects appear on national stamps, with caricatures of sportsmen Victor Trumper[1], Walter Lindrum[2], Sir Norman Brookes[3] and Darby Munro[4] appearing on stamps issued by Australia Post. He also provided courtroom sketches for news bulletins on the Seven Network.[6]
Tony Rafty (right, in rickshaw) in Kuching, Sarawak, on 12 September 1945, the day after its liberation by Australian armed forces.
Rafty was one of the founding members of the Australian Black and White Artists Club and served as its president; for 23 years he was on the board of directors of the Sydney Journalists Club, where he also held the position of President; he also served the Australian War Correspondents’ Association, and for many years, led the Australian War Correspondents Society veterans at the Anzac Day march.[citation needed]
In 1985, Rafty was awarded the Gold Cross of Mount Athos, one of Greece's highest honours, and in 1991 he was awarded the Order of Australia Medal for services to the media. Sir William Dargie, an Australian artist, eight-time winner of the Archibald Prize, and war artist with Rafty in World War II commented: “Tony Rafty is simply splendid. He not only brings an intellectual quality to his work, but he does it so well within a social context that he creates subjects which have a life of their own.”[citation needed]
Some of his post-war images while a war-correspondent
These images were created while he was employed as a part-timer with The Sun newspaper as a war-correspondent, and was sent to Borneo and Singapore at the end of the Pacific War when he covered the post-war surrender period.[7]
Rafty was married to Shirley Morey for 66 years, the daughter of the New South Wales Labor politician Tom Morey. Shirley died in 2012. They had five children.[8]
On 12 October 2005, Rafty celebrated his 90th birthday.[2] He died on 9 October 2015, in an Eastern Suburbs hospital in Sydney, NSW from complications of pneumonia, three days short of his 100th birthday.[9]