Wellcome uses cookies.

Read our policy
Skip to main content
225 results
  • An eye; according to Lavater, belonging to a German poet. Drawing, c. 1794.
  • World War I: British and German war loans contrasted. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • A sunken ship representing German commerce; a bearded skeleton next to it. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • A snake in the grass, representing German spies in World War I. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • The German flag is being pulled by the Allies from under a dachshund representing Germany; representig the seizure of German colonies by the Allies in the First World War. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • World War I: the German Navy attacking Allied nursing. Coloured chalk drawing by Louis Raemaekers, 1918.
  • World War I: the German Navy attacking Allied nursing. Coloured chalk drawing by Louis Raemaekers, 1918.
  • World War I: the German Navy attacking Allied nursing. Coloured chalk drawing by Louis Raemaekers, 1918.
  • Left, a ship symbolising British commerce is going at full speed; right, the ship symbolising German commerce is rusty and covered with spider's webs. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • A sick tribal chief consulting a witch-doctor admits to having eaten a German missionary. Pen drawing by F. Garnett.
  • A dove has made its nest in the barrel of a disused gun on the Kiel Canal, while German sailors guarding the canal neglect their duties. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • A stout lady holding a broom inscribed 'the Navy' and wearing a helmet inscribed 'Britannia' is sweeping German merchant ships and warships away from the Atlantic and the Pacific. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • World War One: a German soldier crouches in fear between two saintly mediaeval sculptures; behind Notre Dame is burning. Halftone after a pen drawing by L. Raemaekers.
  • World War One: British prisoners of war at Ruhleben camp being examined for "barbed-wire disease" by a German army officer. Coloured pen and ink drawing by R. Walker, 1917.
  • A British manufacturer is painting advertising boards inscribed "Made in Canada", "Made in England" and "Made in the British Empire", while a board saying "Made in Germany" is consigned to a garbage can; representing the embargo on German trade in British territories in World War I. Drawing by A.G. Racey, 191-.
  • A child's drawing of a child wearing a red cap and a blue bag over his shoulders; he looks across at the words [in German]: "My friend has AIDS, your friend has AIDS, his friend has AIDS ..." in blue and the words "AIDS affects all of us" in red; an advertisement for condoms as a protection against AIDS by the German Ministry of Health. Colour lithograph by Marat.
  • A green wall bearing numerous German graffiti phrases about sex with a pair of lips, a drawing of a bottom, an arrowed heart bearing the letters 'T + B' and an umbrella; an advertisement for condoms as a protection against AIDS by the Authority of Labor, Health and Social Affairs, Hamburg. Colour lithograph.
  • A statue of Germania displaying prominent breasts on a war memorial; prim ladies avert their faces in horror. Drawing, ca. 1923.
  • A statue of Germania whose prominent breasts have been removed in accordance with the "Lex Heinze" law on censorship. Drawing, ca. 1923.
  • A diseased penis, showing symptoms of phagedena. Watercolour with chalk, by C. D'Alton, 1865.
  • A surgeon on the battlefield. Process print after C. Maurer, 1594.
  • Head of a dog. Drawing, c. 1789.
  • Seven physiognomies. Drawing, c. 1793.
  • Two women weeping over a prone figure. Drawing, c. 1793.
  • Seven physiognomies. Drawing, c. 1793.
  • Two Monks practising alchemy
  • Plato. Drawing after Raphael, ca. 1793.
  • An 'ideal head' shown to have slight idiosyncrasies in physiognomy. Drawing, c. 1789, after Raphael.
  • An 'ideal head' shown to have slight idiosyncrasies in physiognomy. Drawing, c. 1789, after Raphael.
  • The destruction of Sodom; and the supposed location of Sodom and Gomorrha on the Dead Sea. Colour process print after Fenner, 19--.