Additional Poster text: Care for yourself and each other. Prevent the spread of HIV. Call YouthCO for updates on events, information and support for gay, lesbian and heterosexual youth. Call 688-1441
Multiple gray silhouettes of male and female figures are interspersed with red-tinted photographs of men and woman against a white background. A large red AIDS ribbon appears in the upper right corner. Poster suggests wearing the AIDS ribbon on World AIDS Day to show support for and solidarity with people living with AIDS.
Ink drawing. Red human wearing a blue coat, curled up into a ball, sitting in a pool of blood, on a large, outstretched yellow hand. Image is in a style similar to that of the artist Keith Haring. Title across top. Additional information in a box near the lower right.
Extremely fuzzy image in reds and yellows of people dancing in a nightclub. Gender uncertain. Chiefly in German; title in English, across top. Advertises 2-CD set of dance music released as a fundraiser for the 6 largest AIDS organizations in Germany. CD released on Nov. 26, 2001.
Reproduction of painting of African nude woman with two African men in suits on either side of her, surrounded by many images--dying man, skeleton, etc. Dark colors. In small text on bottom right of illustration, "La Prostituta, Art Bodo, 92." Advertises exhibit held at Rautenstrauch-Joest-Museum für Völkerkunde in Cologne, Germany, Oct. 19, 2003-Jan. 25, 2004
At the bottom of the poster, there is a red AIDS ribbon and the text December 1, Nunakakaakhimaut AIDSNI Naluhuiktailiktakhait Ubla [Tiisiivva 1, Nunaqaqkaaqsimajut Aukut Tusaumanirmut Ullunggat].
Four panels of collages signed "Brood". Each panel contains some poetry about drugs and sketches of people using drugs, including syringes. The last panel includes photographs of gun use.
A colorful graphic illustration of people, with a background suggesting clouds and snowy mountains. One man is playing a fiddle while another looks on, and there are music notes next to them. Another man (wearing an AIDS ribbon) is adjusting the neckerchief of a man in traditional native American dress. There is a mother (perhaps an Inuit woman, suggested by her clothing) with a child on her back. Finally, there are a man and woman holding hands. The graphic illustrates the textual message that there is hope for more supportive communities and hope that together, HIV/AIDS can be overcome.
Poster is primarily textual, with 4 small images of South Africans depicted as advocates, organizers and patients. Poster advocates for the aggressive use of Antiretroviral drugs (ARVs) to treat the 150,000 South Africans infected with AIDS by 2004.
Illustration depicts 9 people standing together, male and female, young and old. Text suggests that we shouldn't assume someone isn't infected just because they look healthy.
The text on this poster appears on an illustration that resembles a mirror-image Rorschach ink-blot design, with the top half mirrored on the bottom (which is upside-down). The design suggests a group of people, and is colored with a watercolor wash of orange, green and brown shades. The top group of people is divided from the upside-down bottom group, illustrating the message that if fear divides us, AIDS will grow. At the bottom of the poster appears a logo: two telephone receivers with a red drop of blood in between them.
The poster shows a picture of different people with different ethnicities and different ages are talking with no fear about the people who have AIDS and HIV. Some of the examples of what these people said: "You're fired", "I don't want to hear about that", "Stay away", "you bastard", "I'm leaving you", "you're an unclean woman", "you've brought shame on your family", "we can't give you medication", "you're already dead", "the wedding is off", "I'm sorry but we can't come", "don't touch anything", "I loved you", "I thought you loved us", etc...
Multicolored depiction divided into a 3x3 arrangement of nine panels. The first eight panels each contain a person which is a composite of two halves of different faces. The people depicted are from different races, ethnicities, and age groups. The last panel shows a picture of the AIDS ribbon and a vertically aligned rainbow.
Poster features a black-and-white photo of Jon Secada with the AIDS ribbon and the poster's inscription in the center. Immediately below is a group of colored photographs of various people depicted as if in a sequence of still images on a movie reel. Uppermost and lowermost edges of poster show 8 blue monochromatic panels (4 on top and 4 on bottom) showing additional people.
Poster shows photos of various people standing in a line shoulder to shoulder. The is also a photo of a condom. Poster advertises World AIDS Day and encourages using a condom to prevent HIV/AIDS.
Front of card depicts a crowd of men and women entering a store and looking at a window display. The display is labled Biliousine with a hanging sign that reads, "For sale here." There are bottles of Billiousine in the window. A sign hanging outside of the store reads, "Biliousine is a sure cure for sick headache, dyspepsia, constipation, indigestion, sour stomach, heartburn & c."Back of card contains a list of people who will "testify from actual experience."