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  • A woman with blonde hair, big earrings, pouting with painted lips; representing somebody who might be at risk of AIDS though reuse of needles. Colour lithograph, 199-.
  • A glass with a warning that you can't catch AIDS from sharing a drink; advertisement for AIDS information lines by the California Medical Association. Colour lithograph.
  • A brick wall bearing graffiti in English and Spanish about AIDS and bottles of bleach with a billboard advertising the AIDS Information Line; advertisement by the Colorado Department of Health, Denver AIDS Prevention and Project Safe. Graffiti by Zoom One and Vince Manolo. Colour lithograph by Julee Wilets, 1989.
  • A negative photograph of a crowd of people against a black background; advertisement for safer sex to prevent AIDS/HIV by the Department of Health. Lithograph.
  • Three labels bearing the words 'Blood', 'semen' and 'vaginal fluids' which can carry the HIV virus with an embracing couple, a needle and a pregant woman; one of a series of fact sheets about AIDS and HIV. Colour lithograph.
  • Ear piercing, tattooing, acupuncture, razors, needles and toothbrushes representing a warning about the ways in which you can catch AIDS by the British Deaf Association. Colour lithograph.
  • A man's hand gripping onto a leather strap used to inject drugs with the message 'remember clean needles'; an AIDS prevention advertisement for the AIDS-Tukikeskus, the AIDS support centre by the Finnish AIDS Council. Colour lithograph, ca. 1995.
  • A line of people shaking hands with a mother, father and their child representing a warning by the World Health Organization about who is at risk from AIDS . Colour lithograph, ca. 1995.
  • A syringe within a no entry sign and an embracing couple with advice on how to avoid catching HIV within a burgundy and pink decorative border; one of a series of fact sheets about AIDS and HIV. Colour lithograph.
  • A woman with her hand in her hair and the other pulling up a sheet around her with a message about how she gave up a partner who took drugs for fear of contracting AIDS; a poster from the America responds to Aids advertising campaign. Lithograph, 1993.
  • Two wedding rings representing the safety of being faithful in long-term sexual relationships; advertisement by the State of California AIDS Education Campaign. Lithograph.
  • A faithful couple, opening a condom packet, a woman receiving a blood transfusion that has been screened for HIV, sterilised skin piercing instruments and an HIV positive woman seeking health advice before planning a baby; advice by the World Health Organization about the way AIDS can be prevented. Colour lithograph, ca. 1995.
  • A couple kissing within a syringe from which a drop of liquid containing a fetus is released with a warning about the risk of sex, drugs and AIDS; advertisement for the Louisiana AIDS hotline. Colour lithograph.
  • A syringe with a bottle of liquid and a warning about the dangers of medicinal and recreational drugs and AIDS; an advertisement by the State of California AIDS Education Campaign. Lithograph.
  • A newspaper cutting about AIDS-infected students at an Austrian High School who experimented with drugs using the same syringe; with the warning 'Der Erste Schuss kann AIDS-Tödlich sein' [The first shot can kill you of AIDS]; a warning issued by the Senator for Social Health and Youth and Family. Colour lithograph.
  • How to clean needles and syringes; twelfth of sixteen advertisement posters by the American Red Cross promoting education about AIDS. Colour lithograph, 1990.
  • A young black man in a tracksuit holding a towel representing the risks involved in dabbling with drugs; advertisement about AIDS by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Lithograph, 1993.
  • A list of points explaining how to protect against HIV infection; second of sixteen advertisement posters by the American Red Cross promoting education about AIDS. Colour lithograph, 1990.
  • A non-reusable syringe, with a warning about the risks of contracting diseases like AIDS, hepatitis and septicemia by reusing syringes. Colour lithograph by the Ministere della Sanità supported by Italian Pharmacy Federations, ca. 1995.
  • A brick wall bearing graffiti about AIDS and a figure pointing to a bottle of bleach; advertisement by the Colorado Department of Health, Denver AIDS Prevention and Project Safe. Colour lithograph by Julee Wilets.
  • The risk of alcohol and drugs increasing HIV infection. Colour lithograph, 1990.
  • A man with his hands over his face, a woman with her hands covering her ears and another man with his hands covering his mouth with a message about how HIV is communicated; a poster from the America responds to Aids advertising campaign. Lithograph, 1994.
  • Two arms entwined and joined at the hands representing a couple who risk catching AIDS with a message from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control; a poster from the America responds to Aids advertising campaign. Lithograph.
  • A syringe forming the 'i' of AIDS with the message: "AIDS. Don't trust other people's fixes" representing an advertisement by the AIDS-Koordination NRW. Colour lithograph by Papen, Hansen.
  • A list of facts about AIDS by the Illinois Department of Public Health. Colour lithograph.
  • An unlikely drug user, a middle-aged man in a shirt and tie aims a syringe at another man against a backdrop of a building bearing a flag representing a message about HIV by the AIDS Council of New South Wales. Colour lithograph.
  • A list of ways in which you can and can't get AIDS; a poster from the America responds to Aids advertising campaign. Lithograph, 1991.
  • A stethoscope representing an advertisement for safe sex to reduce the risk of dying from AIDS by the State of California AIDS Education Campaign. Lithograph.
  • Two syringes with a public warning about the importance of needle sterilization to prevent the spread of diseases like AIDS; an advertisement by the Ministry of Health, Fiji and World Health Organization. Colour lithograph.
  • Two blurred figures with a warning about the risk of drug abuse and AIDS; a poster from the America responds to Aids advertising campaign. Lithograph.