Wellcome uses cookies.

Read our policy
Skip to main content
197 results filtered with: Netherlands
  • 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 Maasai mother with a child; representing support for the healthcare work of Memisa among the Maasai. Colour lithograph for Memisa, ca. 2000.
  • A bare-chested woman wearing jeans flings her head back and says "I only make love safely"; advertising safe sex in AIDS prevention. Colour lithograph for Bajes Special Mainline, 199-.
  • A father with a chainsaw running amok in a teenage boy's bedroom; representing a parent to whom it is difficult to talk about drugs, but who is not typical of all parents. Colour lithograph for the Drugs Infolijn and the Trimbos-instituut, 200-.
  • A rosette on a broken chair; stormclouds passing over the sky; representing recovery from cancer and courses for former cancer patients. Colour lithograph for the Nederlandse Kankerbestrijding/KWF, ca. 2001.
  • Six questions about drug abuse and six answers. Lithograph, ca. 2000.
  • A convalescent young woman reading. Gouache painting by David Bles.
  • A celebration party is given in honour of a newly-married couple. Engraving by B. Picart after himself.
  • A young gay man with close relationships affecting his views on safe sex. Colour lithograph by Gebr. Silvestri for the Schorerstichting, 2001.
  • A storm over a Dutch landscape. Etching after Rembrandt van Rijn.
  • Eyes watching out for carcinogenic materials in the workplace. Colour lithograph for the Nederlandse Kankerbestrijding/KWF, ca. 2001.
  • Six questions about drug abuse and six answers. Lithograph, ca. 2000.
  • James II and Louis XIV and their allies portrayed as inmates of a lunatic asylum. Etching by R. de Hooghe, 1688.
  • José, a woman who thinks she does not need condoms "because she has never sprayed"; advertising safe sex. Lithograph.
  • The interior of a dingy smoke den where groups of men smoke, drink and play cards. Engraving by F. del Pedro, 18th century, after a painting by D. Teniers, the younger.
  • 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.
  • Six questions about drug abuse and six answers. Lithograph, ca. 2000.
  • A teenage girl wakes up in a strange bed after drinking too much the previous night. Colour lithograph for Nationaal Instituut voor Gezondheidsbevordering en Ziektepreventie, ca. 2000.
  • Four Dutch servicemen, one in drag, standing on snowy ground near residential property. Photographic postcard, ca. 1910.
  • Doctors and pharmacists surround a mother with child, proffering medicines; symbolising the difference of ideas concerning change of the Dutch electoral law. Reproduction of a lithograph by J. Braakensiek, 1893.
  • A box of Aspro (analgesic and flu remedy) among falling autumn leaves. Colour lithograph after Damour, ca. 1930 (?).
  • Two men holding dangerous substances as if they were string-puppets (marionettes); representing the need for care with hazardous substances in the workplace. Colour lithograph for the Centrum Gezondeidsbevordering op de Werkplek, 200-.
  • Six questions about drug abuse and six answers. Lithograph, ca. 2000.
  • A nun supporting a sick child; representing the work of the Herwonnen Levenskracht movement in helping tuberculous children. Colour lithograph by M. Wiegman, ca. 1930.
  • Drs. Hermanus Schaepman and Abraham Kuyper, shown as witches, stoke the fire of a cauldron from which emanate devils; symbolising their struggle to institute suffrage, against prevailing resistance in the Dutch second chamber. Reproduction of a lithograph after Van Geldorp, 1901.
  • A German military dentist pulls a tooth from an agonised soldier. Reproduction of a lithograph by J. Braakensiek, 1892.
  • Two gay men with a statement on the need for safe sex. Colour lithograph by Gebr. Silvestri for the Schorerstichting, 2001.
  • 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.
  • King Louis XIV receives an enema while sitting on a globe of the earth, thus besmearing it with ordure; around him, chaos reigns; symbolising the events following the Protestant rebellions of 1674 including the flight of the royal family from England in 1689. Engraving by R. de Hooghe, c. 1689.
  • Two women are walking out of a kitchen and a man is shouting after them as some things fall from the tray one of them is carrying. Wood engraving by H. Kaeseberg after A. Menzel.