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  • People talking to psychoanalysts; representing statistics of mental illness in the Netherlands for 2000. Colour lithograph for the Trimbos-instituut, 2001.
  • A skull; representing starving Germans who can be helped by the Netherlands Red Cross. Lithograph by A. van der Vossen, 1922 (?).
  • A skull; representing starving Germans who can be helped by the Netherlands Red Cross. Lithograph by A. van der Vossen, 1922 (?).
  • A house on stilts formed by collecting tins; representing fundraising for a house for the Netherlands Red Cross. Colour lithograph, 197- (?).
  • Message about René who is HIV positive representing an advertisement for the Netherlands AIDS Information Line by the Projectgroep Publiekscampagne AIDS/SOA. Colour lithograph.
  • People bicycling and walking in a park in the Netherlands; advertising exercise as preventing heart disease. Colour lithograph for the Nederlandse Hartstichting, ca. 2001.
  • Delft, the Netherlands: left, the city on fire in 1536; right, St Lazarus's House with a resident receiving news of the fire. Engraving, 15--.
  • Activities of the Netherlands Red Cross that can be supplied with the aid of donations of various amounts. Colour lithograph by Derf, 194- (?).
  • A precarious figure on a tightrope, representing statistics of mental illness in the Netherlands for 1980-1996. Colour lithograph for the Trimbos-instituut, 1999.
  • A heart with splayed droplets with a message about what ethnic minorities in the Netherlands should know to protect their health against AIDS. Colour lithograph.
  • A human figure erratically painted by Herman Brood, representing statistics of mental illness in the Netherlands for 1997. Colour lithograph for the Trimbos-instituut, 2000.
  • A roulette wheel and other forms of gambling among Chinese in the Netherlands; advertising the Chinese gambling helpline. Colour lithograph for Trimbos-instituut and GGZ Nederland, 2001.
  • A nurse standing in front of a modern rheumatism clinic; advertising the need for such clinics in the Netherlands. Colour lithograph after R. de Jonge, 1961.
  • An apothecary sells tablets to the King and Queen of the Netherlands the 'socialist epidemic' ostensibly sweeping through Europe. Reproduction of a lithograph by J. Braakensiek, 1890.
  • A psychoanalyst on his couch analysing himself in a mirror; with statistics of mental illness in the Netherlands for 1992. Lithograph for the Nederlands centrum Geestelijke volksgezondheid, 1994.
  • A cardinal singing a lullaby to a lion; representing an attempt by France to maintain the neutrality of the Netherlands in the War of Jenkins' Ear. Engraving after Bernetto, 1740.
  • A portico and the cross of Godfrey of Bouillon; representing academia and tuberculosis, as the elements of the sanatorium for students in the Netherlands. Lithograph by N. Raemaekers, ca. 1951 (?).
  • Theo Heemskerk as an alchemist trying in vain to distill a report from members of a commission set up to reform the constitution of the Netherlands. Line block after J. Braakensiek, 1912.
  • Four young people having difficulty talking to their parents about drugs; advising young people in the Netherlands to discuss drug abuse with their parents. Colour lithograph for the Drugs Infolijn and the Trimbos-instituut, 200-.
  • A woman lies in bed, lovesick (representing the Netherlands); attendants try to raise her spirits by showing her a portrait of the newly appointed Stadholder, William III Prince of Orange (subsequently William III King of England). Engraving, ca. 1672.
  • 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.
  • A cargo ship sails into a green silhouette of a condom with a message to 'sail the safe course'; a safe sex advertisement by the Directorate General for Shipping and Maritime Affairs of the Netherlands Ministry of Transport and Public Works. Colour lithograph.
  • The Dutch maid (De Nederlandse Maagd), personifying the Netherlands asks an apothecary whether a medicine might not be poisonous; symbolising doubts over a new Dutch tax law; he replies no, a babe-in-arms could take it. Process print after J. Braakensiek, 1890.
  • A black and a white syringe against a background of swirling white lines representing an advertisement for Project 'AIDS en Druggebruik' and the AIDS Information line in the Netherlands; advertisement by the N.I.A.D [Nederlands Instituut voor Alcohol en Drugs]. Colour lithograph.
  • An exclamation mark inside the outline of a condom against a background of swirling white lines representing an advertisement for Project 'AIDS en Druggebruik' and the AIDS Information line in the Netherlands; advertisement by the N.I.A.D [Nederlands Instituut voor Alcohol en Drugs]. Colour lithograph.
  • A hand lifting the edge of a carpet in the shape of the Netherlands to sweep under the words 'AIDS' splashed in red on the floor; an advertisement for an information booklet entitled 'Alles over AIDS' and the AIDS Information line by the AIDS FONDS. Colour lithograph.
  • Must be seen to be believed : Just arrived from Holland : John Allart respectfully informs the inhabitants of this town, that he has just arrived from Holland with Francina Kroone the greatest living wonder! ever exhibited : born at Wyke by Durstede in Netherland, aged 36, years ...
  • VIme. Congrès internationale d'histoire de la médecine : Leyde - Amsterdam, 18-23 juillet 1927.
  • VIme. Congrès internationale d'histoire de la médecine : Leyde - Amsterdam, 18-23 juillet 1927.
  • VIme. Congrès internationale d'histoire de la médecine : Leyde - Amsterdam, 18-23 juillet 1927.