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  • A white telephone on a pink background advertising AIDS counselling services offered by health authorities and voluntary organizations; with the message ''You do not get AIDS from playing". Colour lithograph by Papen, Hansen, ca. 1995.
  • A white telephone advertising AIDS counselling services offered by health authorities and voluntary organizations; with the message ''AIDS affects us all. Don't leave your colleagues in the lurch.". Colour lithograph by Papen, Hansen, 199-.
  • A naked man makes a telephone call to number '175' and gets no connexion; advertising the AIDS helpline by the Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe and AIDS-Hilfe DDR. Colour lithograph by Friedrich Baumhauer and Wolfgang Mudra, 1990.
  • A white telephone on a pale blue background advertising AIDS counselling services offered by health authorities and voluntary organizations; with the message ''You do not get AIDS from swimming". Colour lithograph by Papen, Hansen, ca. 1995.
  • A laughing skull with the words 'AIDS is not funny' representing a warning about the dangers of AIDS with a telephone helpline number. Colour lithograph by Tim Macdonald with design assistance from Megan Adcock, ca. 1991.
  • A white telephone on a bright yellow background advertising AIDS counselling services offered by health authorities and voluntary organizations; with the message ''You do not get AIDS from shaking hands". Colour lithograph by Papen, Hansen, ca. 1995.
  • A doctor on the telephone (which is linked up to a television screen) to a patient whom he can both observe and talk to from a distance; representing possible technical innovations. Line block after D.L. Ghilchip, 1932.
  • A Philippine man sits between two women with a warning about HIV and a list of telephone helplines; an AIDS prevention advertisement by the National AIDS/STD Prevention and Control Program, Department of Health, Philippines. Colour lithograph, ca. 1995.
  • The back view of a bald-headed man holding a telephone to his ear representing a man whose family have deserted him because he has AIDS; advertisement for the New Zealand AIDS Prevention Program. Lithograph by Albert Sword.
  • Two hands on top of each other within a blue triangle with a computer screen and telephone and details of the AIDS information services: Minitel Dialogue, Numero Vert and the SIDA Info-Service; advertisement by AIDES. Colour lithograph.
  • A touch-tone telephone on which the hash button is replaced by the logo of a cancer relief charity in the Netherlands, representing a helpline for questions about cancer. Colour lithograph for the Nederlandse Kankerbestrijding Koningin Wilhelmina Fonds, 2001.
  • Ways in which AIDS cannot be transmitted including a woman on a telephone, people sitting in a stream, using public toilets, kissing, shaking hands, sharing food and mosquito bites; an AIDS prevention advertisement from Laos. Colour lithograph, ca. 1996.
  • A baker supports pies on his head while holding loaves and doughnuts; with four symbols of support (telephone, human pyramid, teapot, knife and fork); representing support for HIV positive people. Colour lithograph by Photofusion and Big-Active Limited for Mainliners, 1990/1995.
  • The painted faces of two men, one above the other, by Bruno; with the message that being HIV positive does not mean the end; an advertisement by Mann-O-Meter, the information and telephone service for gay men. Colour lithograph.
  • Two faces beside the dial of a telephone bearing the helpline number '01 461 08 00' representing an advertisement for the support group 'Arbeitsgruppe Frau und AIDS' for women with AIDS by the AIDS-Hilfe Zürich. Colour lithograph by M. Fischer.
  • A white telephone on a pale grey background, advertising AIDS counselling services offered by health authorities and voluntary orgaqnizations; with the message ''AIDS affects us all. Least of all the sick. Save the love". Colour lithograph by Papen, Hansen, ca. 1995.
  • A man standing on a ladder holds up his hands to hold onto a telephone pylon to save himself from falling as a puzzled bird flies above; a safe-sex advertisement for Salama condoms to prevent AIDS. Lithograph, ca. 1996.
  • A style-conscious black man holds up a packet of condoms, with symbols (man and woman, condom, British standard kitemark, telephone handset) representing "smart" ways to prevent AIDS. Colour lithograph by Photo Co-op, Glover/Hughes and Big-Active Ltd. for Mainliners, 1990/1995.
  • A phone receiver [?] in the form of a creature with tails as antennae, and a body comprising an egg box opened to reveal 6 red eggs as the telephone digits [?]; advertising the danger of AIDS. Colour lithograph by Raúl, ca. 1995.
  • The lower half of a man's face with a telephone receiver at his ear and the message: "The first of your rights is to be able to know them" with an AIDS information line by the SIDA Info Service and AIDES. Colour lithograph by Sébastien Jimenez.
  • The numbers of the AIDS Hotline in Hong Kong '2780 2211' arranged in squares in a semi-circle with the silhouette of a hand pointing to the digits of a telephone below; advertisement by the AIDS Unit Department of Health, Government of Hong Kong. Colour lithograph, ca. 1995.
  • A pair of open hands with the dots of a telephone receiver at the centre and a list of the type of things that the SIDA Info Service dares to talk about including sex, love and drugs; advertisement for the SIDA Info Service. Colour lithograph by Stratéus and Conception Polymago.
  • A pair of hands clenched together with the dots of a telephone receiver at the centre and a list of the type of things that the SIDA Info Service dares to talk about including care, hope and anguish; advertisement for the SIDA Info Service. Colour lithograph by Stratéus and Conception Polymago.
  • A red telephone cord twisted in the shape of the AIDS red ribbon with the increasing statistics of AIDS victims: "1st January 1985: 200 sick; 1st January 1995: 40,000 sick"; includes a block of text explaining the need for the SIDA Info Service. Colour lithograph by L'Agence Verte.
  • A red telephone cord twisted in the shape of the AIDS red ribbon with the increasing statistics of AIDS victims: "1st January 1984: 200 sick; 1st January 1994: 40,000 sick"; includes a block of text explaining the need for the SIDA Info Service. Colour lithograph by L'Agence Verte.
  • A red telephone cord twisted in the shape of the AIDS red ribbon with a message that friends, lovers and those who support gays affected by AIDS also need to be heard; an advertisement for the SIDA Info Service in association with World AIDS Day, 1 December. Colour lithograph by L'Agence Verte.
  • Line figures apearing to run, some with green and others with red circular heads; a painting by Volker of the Berlin-based art group, Malgruppe Café Positiv; with the message that AIDS will not divide us; an advertisement by Mann-O-Meter, the information and telephone service for gay men. Colour lithograph.
  • A man sits with a woman on a bench looking out to sea while holding the hand of a man sitting on the end; an advertisement for The Women Partners of Bisexual Men Project with the telephone lines of the AIDS Council of NSW, AIDS Hotline and Family Planning Association. Colour lithograph, [1994].
  • A man holding a hypodermic syringe over a tub of diluted bleach; diagrams showing the use of bleach to clean hypodermic needles, with telephone details; advertising hygienic practices when using syringes. by , a support group for those with AIDS. Colour lithograph by Photo Co-op, Glover/Hughes and Big-Active Ltd. for Mainliners, 1990/1995.
  • A couple embracing, a woman spitting/coughing on the face of another, a woman kissing her baby; a woman on the telephone, men shaking hands and a man using a public toilet; an advertisement about ways in which AIDS and HIV are not contracted by Spitnac, Societal Projects Information Training Networking and Consultancy Services. Colour lithograph, 1997?.