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241 results
  • Henry Dundas, wearing traditional Scottish costume, protects William Pitt the younger under a large tartan cape; implying Dundas's sympathetic attitude towards Pitt referred to by Courtenay in a famous speech. Etching by J. Gillray, 1792.
  • An allegory of pride: a richly dressed couple with an elegant attitude ignore the poor by their side and walk straight over the edge of a cliff; behind them stands an enormous devil who watches them; demons appear in the background. Wood engraving by L. Rhead.
  • Attitud AIDS : a leaflet about HIV & AIDS / Liverpool Health Promotion Unit.
  • Attitud AIDS : a leaflet about HIV & AIDS / Liverpool Health Promotion Unit.
  • Two HIV positive women look over their shoulders to suggest their social isolation while below the same women look forwards to reflect a more positive attitude; an advertisement for the support services offered for HIV positive women by Deutsche AIDS-Hilfe e.V. Colour lithograph by Lauterbach and Boek.
  • Alter attitudes to AIDS / Liverpool Health Promotion Agency.
  • Alter attitudes to AIDS / Liverpool Health Promotion Agency.
  • Legs in various attitudes. Engraving after C. Le Brun.
  • Alter attitudes to AIDS / Liverpool & South Sefton Health Promotion Agency.
  • Alter attitudes to AIDS / Liverpool & South Sefton Health Promotion Agency.
  • Schoolboys arriving at school, showing different attitudes. Engraving by W. Ridgway after T. Webster.
  • Take care of the one you love... alter attitudes to AIDS : love and passion still in fashion...
  • Love & passion still in fashion : alter attitudes to AIDS ... / Liverpool & South Sefton Health Promotion Agency.
  • Love & passion still in fashion : alter attitudes to AIDS ... / Liverpool & South Sefton Health Promotion Agency.
  • Meeting of the Social Research Association : The impact of publicity campaigns on attitudes and behaviour: AIDS as a case study.
  • Love & passion still in fashion : alter attitudes to AIDS / North Jersey Community NHS Trust Design ; designed by Andrew Dineley.
  • AIDS : sharing the challenge - changing attitudes : Monday, December 2 1991 : The Officer's Mess, Imperial War Museum, Duxford, near Cambridge / Anglia Polytechnic, Nursing Standard.
  • A wounded reclining man with an American (?) woman on whose knee sits a child, with two men in attitudes of grief. Soft ground etching by Elizabeth Foster after Caroline Stuart-Wortley, Baroness Wharncliffe.
  • A figure comprised of medicine bottles and tablets, representing the patent medicine business, dances behind a pensive Lloyd George; representing attitudes to the introduction of the National Insurance Act of 1911. Wood engraving by B. Partridge, 1912.
  • A figure comprised of medicine bottles and tablets, representing the patent medicine business, dances behind a pensive Lloyd George; representing attitudes to the introduction of the National Insurance Act of 1911. Wood engraving by B. Partridge, 1912.
  • An eye at the centre of a poster entitled "Lutter" [The fight] littered with strips of white text on black about attitudes to AIDS; one of a series of posters representing an advertisement for a competition for posters of images against AIDS organised by CRIPS. Colour lithograph by students from the Lycée Polyvalant Tertiaire Paul Doumer.
  • A compendious treatise of anatomy : adapted to the arts of designing, painting, and sculpture, on ten folio copper-plates; and in which the external muscles and bones of the human body are represented as they appear in the best chosen attitudes, when cleared of the skin, the membrana adiposa, and the veins and arteries that lie on their surface.
  • A compendious treatise of anatomy : adapted to the arts of designing, painting, and sculpture, on ten folio copper-plates; and in which the external muscles and bones of the human body are represented as they appear in the best chosen attitudes, when cleared of the skin, the membrana adiposa, and the veins and arteries that lie on their surface.
  • A boy tears up his school textbooks in a fit of anger against his education. Engraving W.C. Wrankmore after C. Wrankmore.
  • A dozen scenes presenting the manifold aspects of a family doctor's personality. Wood engraving by M.B.
  • Two prisoners sitting together in a cell and one watching them from a distance; representing unwarranted social isolation of AIDS-infected and ill people in jail. Colour lithograph, 199-.
  • A bearded man expressing scorn. Engraving by M. Engelbrecht (?), 1732, after C. Le Brun.
  • If someone tells you he's +ve does it change the way you feel about him? / GMFA, Crusaid.
  • If someone tells you he's +ve does it change the way you feel about him? / GMFA, Crusaid.
  • If someone tells you he's +ve does it change the way you feel about him? / GMFA, Crusaid.