Two arms curved upward, hands with fingers extended. The arms cross at the wrists, and the fingers curve toward each other, forming the shape of an AIDS ribbon. Image is black/grey, on a white background. Title appears at the point where the wrists cross.
Poster is mostly text on a dark background. There is an ambiguous image behind the text that may be part of a hand, and the silhouette of a butterfly also appears.
Poster is primarily text on a dark background. There is an image that appears to be part of a hand behind the text, and a silhouette of butterfly also appears.
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.
Nude, slender, muscular man, pictured from the neck to the knees. Frontal shot; his hands are folded over his genitals. Black and white. Title appears toward the bottom, in the space between the thighs. Lower right side added text gives contact information about AIDS organizations and a hotline in Graz, Austria.
A colorful graphic work depicting a man and woman making love on a sofa, in front of a big window. An ocean with a tropical island on the horizon can be seen through the window. The male is depicted shouting "BRING MICH ZUM HÖHEPUNKT." The female is holding the male tightly. Their figures are partially obscured by a green plant. On the bottom of the poster in a framed square with an inscription in German "Freigegeben ab 21 Jahren." On the bottom left of the poster a winged bug is hovering next to the “Pleasure Island. Das Anti-Virus-Spiel” phrase..
An open mouth with an AIDS ribbon superimposed on it, against the background of a cathedral like building. The ribbon stands out in the darkness of the mouth as if it is whispering speak up!
White and black text on red background; advertises an evening of discussions, poems, etc. by HIV-infected women, held Mar. 24, 1999, by the Kulturzentrum bei den Minoriten, in Graz, Austria.
Poster shows an example of the artwork of Edith Hirsch and advertises an exhibit and sale of her art held in 1988 to benefit Österreichische AIDS-Hilfe. The painting is of several images superimposed: a butterfly, a woman's open legs, and an unrolled condom. In the lower right corner is a small green inchworm. The World AIDS Day logo for 1988 appears at the bottom of the poster, and apparently it fell during the dates of the exhibit.
Poster depicts a wall covered in graffiti. The graffiti text says that AIDS concerns everyone and suggests that everyone should only want to have sex with a condom.
Poster depicts two nude men who look as if they are about to make love. The caption "Protection from love" implies that they need to use condoms in order to prevent infection.
Sepia photograph of a man holding two young children in his arms, a boy and a girl. It is night. Background appears to be a fabric of some sort (a sheet?). Poster is for an exhibit held at the Arbeitsweltmuseum in Speyr, Austria, Nov. 1-30, 1996.
Poster consists of forty-three portraits of well-known personalities (singers, actors, athletes, etc.) and quotations from each expressing thoughts on AIDS and AIDS prevention.