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Explore a curated selection of public health posters about AIDS drawn from the collections of the National Library of Medicine. Learn more about the role identity, geography, and various lifesaving measures have played within AIDS awareness and education work over the years.

The Minority AIDS Project
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The Minority AIDS Project

In 1985, four years into the national health crisis, African Americans and Latinos accounted for three times as many cases of AIDS as whites. To address the growing disparate epidemic and counter the myth that AIDS was a “gay white disease,” Archbishop Carl Bean and members of the Unity Fellowship Church founded the Minority AIDS Project (MAP) to support communities in southern Los Angeles. Their bold, bilingual campaigns stressed AIDS as a very serious, rapidly growing problem in communities of color and provided information on prevention and care for those with AIDS. MAP, working alongside two other community-based organizations—Blacks Educating Blacks About Sexual Health Issues (BEBASHI) and Black and White Men Together—became examples for future organizations focused on assisting African Americans and Latinos affected by HIV/AIDS.

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Native People Respond to HIV/AIDS
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Native People Respond to HIV/AIDS

Since 1987, the National Native American AIDS Prevention Center (NNAAPC) has offered programs and outreach to Native communities. The NNAAPC's Social Marketing Clearinghouse includes a variety of educational resources, including posters, which have been tailored to individual Native nations in many parts of the country. Many of the posters displayed here reflect the work of tribal governments and local community organizations as they strive to educate their citizens and non-Native neighbors about AIDS. Although not originally focused on HIV/AIDS prevention or awareness, staff at health clinics and support organizations frequently counseled individuals on pursuing safer, healthier behaviors and, in the process, became key participants in fighting the epidemic in Indian Country. The images here reflect an array of culturally— and oftentimes tribally-specific messages aimed at a broad, new audience that required help and information.

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The Whitman-Walker Clinic
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The Whitman-Walker Clinic

Initially called the Gay Men’s VD Clinic upon its opening in 1973, the Whitman-Walker clinic was renamed in 1978, in honor of Walt Whitman, the famous American poet, who made his life with men, and Dr. Mary Edwards Walker, a feminist activist and medical doctor, who dressed exclusively in men’s clothes and was the only woman to receive the Medal of Honor for her service as a surgeon during the Civil War.

As early as 1983, the clinic staffed the first AIDS hotline in the city, and within two years, it opened multiple homes for people with AIDS. In addition, Whitman-Walker was at the forefront of designing and distributing safer-sex materials that targeted a range of audiences. Even as the clinic created campaigns to help all kinds of people, it never forgot to attend specifically to the needs of men who had sex with men.

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“Please Be Safe” by the Northwest AIDS Foundation
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“Please Be Safe” by the Northwest AIDS Foundation

In 1987, with funding from the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the Seattle-based Northwest AIDS Foundation launched the “Please Be Safe” campaign to help gay and bisexual men reimagine their sexual behaviors. Using a different creative visual strategy than the sexually charged imagery of some contemporaneous public health efforts, this campaign used road signs—a straightforward, familiar set of symbols—to discuss and advertise sexual safety. The “Please be Safe” or “Rules of the Road” campaign used road signs and compelling, straightforward, community-specific language to help gay men engage in safer sex. The “Sexual Safety Card” featured on many of the posters provided quick and accessible information on activities at every level of safety.

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South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN)
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South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN)

In 1986, DiAna DiAna, an African American hairdresser with a salon in Columbia, South Carolina, took action when a local newspaper refused to run an advertisement for condoms. She began to use her salon as a space to engage customers in conversations about safer sex.

Later on DiAna met Bambi Sumpter (now Gaddist), a public health educator, at an AIDS workshop. The two women formed the South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN). The organization initiated a full-scale campaign to use popular culture to entice people to think about AIDS prevention. They wrote plays, and held Tupperware-style parties with prizes that could be used to make sex safe.

Emerging from this culture are a series of posters, by an unknown artist, that typify DiAna's approach to AIDS prevention: positioning the epidemic as a situation empowered community members could take on.

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Harm Reduction/Clean Needles
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Harm Reduction/Clean Needles

In the early 1980s, many believed that identity not behavior put people at risk for contracting AIDS. Known collectively as the 4 H’s: homosexuals, hemophiliacs, heroin users (representing all intravenous drug users), and Haitians, the four groups were considered vulnerable and blamed for spreading the disease. Intravenous drug users brought with them an all-too-familiar public health challenge. How do you inform, protect, and support a group that engages in behaviors deemed illegal and potentially considered wrong or sinful?

One answer, as illustrated in these public health campaigns, was harm reduction—the idea that if you could not stop people from using intravenous drugs, you could provide people with information about how to protect themselves while doing so. Using straightforward language, these campaigns spoke to needle users and the people who had sex with them.

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Postcard Politics
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Postcard Politics

By the mid-1980s, as the AIDS epidemic became a full-on crisis, AIDS activists turned to art and graphic design to illustrate and punctuate their responses to the disease and the resulting social crises. Soon artistic activism insisted that visual culture had tremendous power to affect behavioral and political change. Artists and activists plastered urban neighborhoods with posters featuring provocative images that forced some to confront their homophobia and others to reimagine what they could do to fight AIDS.

In addition to creating posters, artists reproduced those images as postcards. These small, portable, inexpensive items were visual reminders of how big the AIDS crisis had become. Displayed for the taking at bars, restaurants, neighborhood shops, and community centers, these postcards allowed activists to reach an even wider audience.

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78 Images

A poster with text and a portrait of an African American woman

AIDS is an equal opportunity disease!

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A poster with text and a portrait of an African American woman

Minority AIDS Project, 1986

Strong and straightforward, this MAP (Minority AIDS Project) poster presented the science-based facts about transmission and prevention of AIDS using informal language and a stern tone. The poster also featured an image of a stylish African American woman who might not (but should) consider herself at risk.

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A poster with text and a portrait of an African American man with two African American girls

He has AIDS, we love him

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A poster with text and a portrait of an African American man with two African American girls

Minority AIDS Project, 1989

Not unlike the disease itself, people with AIDS faced powerful stigmas that transcended racial boundaries. This poster reminded African American communities that it was and is okay to interact with, hug, and love people with AIDS. Through the voices of children and loving families, the poster helped to erode the myths and fears associated with people with AIDS.

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A poster with Spanish text and a portrait of a Latina woman

Sida

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A poster with Spanish text and a portrait of a Latina woman

Minority AIDS Project, 1989

Spanish-language posters brought much-needed information to a non-English-speaking population of Americans who were (and continue to be) overrepresented among people with AIDS.

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A poster with text, a portrait of an African American woman and boy, and a portrait of a Latino teenage boy

What you don't know can kill you

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A poster with text, a portrait of an African American woman and boy, and a portrait of a Latino teenage boy

Minority AIDS Project, 1989

The statistics here provided compelling evidence of how AIDS affected people of color. From 1989 to 2010, the percentage of AIDS cases among African Americans had nearly doubled, and infections among Latinos had also increased to 20% of the total AIDS cases in America.

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A poster with Spanish text, a portrait of a Latina woman and a portrait of a Latino man

¡Usted Es Siempre El Ultimo En Saber! ¡Y lo que no sabe lo puede matar! (You're always the last to know! And what you don't know can kill you!)

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A poster with Spanish text, a portrait of a Latina woman and a portrait of a Latino man

Minority AIDS Project, 1989

By reminding a Spanish-speaking audience “What you don’t know can kill you,” posters like this one focused outreach information for Latinos, who were and remain disproportionately represented in AIDS cases. This poster used epidemiology and data to get the attention of their audience.

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A poster with text and a silhouette of a man on a horse carrying a spear

AIDS could mean the real end of the trail—take time to learn

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A poster with text and a silhouette of a man on a horse carrying a spear

South Dakota Division of Education, 1990

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A poster with text and a painting of two red and blue stylized birds facing each other with a heart between them

AIDS

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A poster with text and a painting of two red and blue stylized birds facing each other with a heart between them

South Puget Intertribal Planning Agency, Shelton, WA, 2005

This poster featured imagery from nationally known artist Randy Capoeman (Quinault) who died of cancer in 2008. His work here employed familiar images with a new message of tolerance and understanding.

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A poster with text and a color drawing of a Native American man in red clothing laying on a wooden platform above a fire

AIDS—it kills Indians too!

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A poster with text and a color drawing of a Native American man in red clothing laying on a wooden platform above a fire

Native American AIDS Advisory Board, ca. 1980s-1990s

In addition to a straightforward message to counteract a common myth among some Native communities that AIDS is a disease that affects only gay men, this poster drew a clear line between the universal impact of AIDS and death by depicting a cremation ceremony conducted by some Native nations. In other words, like death, everybody is susceptible to AIDS.

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A poster with text and a black and white photograph of a hand resting on the shoulder of a Native American man who is facing away from the viewer

Caring can prevent AIDS

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A poster with text and a black and white photograph of a hand resting on the shoulder of a Native American man who is facing away from the viewer

British Columbia Native AIDS Awareness Project, ca. 1980s-1990s

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of a Native American man wearing a yellow shirt looking at the viewer. In the background is hunting scene.

Grandfather, you are wise in the old ways, give us the wisdom about AIDS

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of a Native American man wearing a yellow shirt looking at the viewer. In the background is hunting scene.

South Dakota Division of Education, ca. 1989

Native elders occupy positions of leadership and command respect in their communities, so outreach to and education through them about AIDS offered a key opportunity to reach younger Native people, who often look to them for advice and instruction in how to lead better and more productive lives.

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of a Native American man wearing a yellow scarf holding a baby, in the background are a yellow sign and two yellow teepees.

Having sex now is risky

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of a Native American man wearing a yellow scarf holding a baby, in the background are a yellow sign and two yellow teepees.

Haskell Indian Junior College Foundation, Topeka, KS, 1989

Public health campaigns aimed at heterosexual Native men often focused on the risks of unprotected sex, which included fatherhood as well as sexually transmitted disease and AIDS.

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A poster with text and a tan and black drawing of a man facing a pharmacist, underneath are three drawings of condoms

How can reading a package save your life?

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A poster with text and a tan and black drawing of a man facing a pharmacist, underneath are three drawings of condoms

Native American Women's Health Education Resource Center, ca. 1980s-1990s

While many campaigns encouraged people to use condoms, this poster presented crucial, specific information on how to ensure condoms were used effectively.

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A poster with text and a black and blue drawing of a Native American young man and woman looking at each other across a bed, each has two people outlined behind them

How well do you know your partner?

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A poster with text and a black and blue drawing of a Native American young man and woman looking at each other across a bed, each has two people outlined behind them

Native American Women's Health Education Resource Center, ca. 1980s-1990s

Sexual networks became a common theme of AIDS outreach. This poster, from the Native American Women’s Health Education Resource Center, reminded women to take the responsibility to talk to partners about their sexual history, stressing the women’s autonomy and the importance of protecting their own health.

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of a Native American girl wearing a red shirt looking down and to the left

Keep AIDS out of our tradition—educate and prevent now

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of a Native American girl wearing a red shirt looking down and to the left

South Dakota Division of Education, ca. 1990

This poster featured an illustration by Donald F. Montileaux, also known as Yellowbird, a citizen of the Oglala Lakota Nation in South Dakota. He depicted a Native woman in traditional dress to emphasize the poster’s main message about AIDS prevention.

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of two American Indian men flanking a gravestone with the word AIDS on it. Above them is a buffalo skull with two lines of people walking towards it

Look, listen, avoid!

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A poster with text and a black and white drawing of two American Indian men flanking a gravestone with the word AIDS on it. Above them is a buffalo skull with two lines of people walking towards it

Tulsa Area Chapter of the American Red Cross in collaboration with the Indian Health Care Resource Center, ca. 1980s-1990s

Three Native men dressed in traditional to contemporary attire stand around a tombstone while a line of people walk toward a buffalo skull. The skull symbolizes the 19th-century demise of the buffalo—an emblem of Great Plains Native culture—and also references the “Vanishing Indian” theory, a widely held notion among Americans that Native peoples, like the buffalo, were dying out. Although public health campaigns for Native audiences did not often address gay men explicitly, it is likely that health workers recognized their increased risk of being infected with AIDS. In response, posters like this one focused on Native males and their traditional roles as warriors and providers as a way of reaching men in the community.

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A poster with text and a black and white photograph of hands holding

Love can prevent AIDS

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A poster with text and a black and white photograph of hands holding

British Columbia Native AIDS Awareness Project, ca. 1980s-1990s

This poster introduced a cultural imperative for Native American women by associating celibacy and abstinence with personal and tribal respect.

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A poster with text and a black outline of a kneeling male figure with a red bandana, holding the hand of a female figure wearing a blanket

Love carefully, AIDS infection may come from a single sexual contact

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A poster with text and a black outline of a kneeling male figure with a red bandana, holding the hand of a female figure wearing a blanket

Health Education Department of the White Mountain Apache Tribe, Whiteriver, AZ, 1988

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A poster with text and a drawing of Native American man and woman, woman looking at viewer and man behind looking to the left

Love yourself get tested

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A poster with text and a drawing of Native American man and woman, woman looking at viewer and man behind looking to the left

Indigenous Peoples Task Force, Minneapolis, MN, ca. 1990s

The Minnesota-based Indigenous Peoples Task Force presented information to local tribes on HIV prevention. This poster used the art of nationally recognized artist Dana Tiger, a citizen of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, to encourage people to get tested for HIV.

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A poster with text and a Black and white drawing of four American Indian men wearing robes looking at the viewer, with a yellow sun behind them

Our ancestors didn’t see AIDS in our future—prevent now

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A poster with text and a Black and white drawing of four American Indian men wearing robes looking at the viewer, with a yellow sun behind them

South Dakota Division of Education, ca. 1990

To appeal to a sense of tradition, this poster from the South Dakota Division of Education and the Centers for Disease Control described the changing landscape of the 1980s, calling for a new focus on protection from and prevention of AIDS.

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A poster with text and a drawing of a child holding an adult’s hand

Please help me with my questions about AIDS

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A poster with text and a drawing of a child holding an adult’s hand

South Dakota Division of Education, ca. 1990

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Color drawing of two men lounging together, one is purple the other is teal

Do the safe thing

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Color drawing of two men lounging together, one is purple the other is teal

Whitman-Walker Clinic, 1992

Whitman-Walker Clinic named their AIDS education services after Sunnye Sherman to commemorate the legacy of the passionate female AIDS activist who used her diagnosis as a call to arms for AIDS education and outreach everywhere.

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African American man sitting down and embracing a Latino man; both are wearing knee and elbow pads and one is wearing a helmet and rollerblades

Do the safe thing, use condoms

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African American man sitting down and embracing a Latino man; both are wearing knee and elbow pads and one is wearing a helmet and rollerblades

Whitman-Walker Clinic, Sunnye Sherman AIDS Education Services, 1980s-1990s

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African American woman between two African American men, all smiling and looking at the viewer. Each is wearing a shirt with a different word on it

In the fight against AIDS, you’ve got the power

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African American woman between two African American men, all smiling and looking at the viewer. Each is wearing a shirt with a different word on it

Whitman-Walker Clinic, undated

Targeting African American teens directly, this poster provided accurate, confidential information to help them stay safe. In 2012, African Americans represented 70 percent of the AIDS cases among teenagers, despite comprising only 13% percent of the total teenage population.

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A multiracial group of seven men stand in a group, each one holding up a wrapped condom

Los hombres de los 90s, la primera vez y todas las veces

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A multiracial group of seven men stand in a group, each one holding up a wrapped condom

Whitman-Walker Clinic, ca. 1990s

The Spanish-language version of Whitman-Walker’s “Men of the 90's” campaign targeted younger, gay Latinos with a call to have safer sex by suggesting that using a condom would add excitement.

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Black and white photograph of a multiracial group of men variously dressed waiting in line for a condom dispenser

Men of the 90's do the safe thing

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Black and white photograph of a multiracial group of men variously dressed waiting in line for a condom dispenser

Whitman-Walker Clinic, ca. 1990s

With a variety of men pictured, this poster from the Whitman-Walker clinic presented safe sex as the norm for all gay men in the 1990s.

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Color photograph of two young men; one has back turned and is removing his shirt, while the other man holds him and has a condom in one hand

Men of the 90's, positive, negative, both do the safe thing

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Color photograph of two young men; one has back turned and is removing his shirt, while the other man holds him and has a condom in one hand

Whitman-Walker Clinic, ca. 1990s

This poster presented that idea as a cultural norm: sex could be safe and pleasurable for all, including people with AIDS and their partners.

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Black and white photograph of a Hispanic man holding a condom and embracing an African American who is slightly lower and looking upwards

Men of the 90's, top, bottom, both do the safe thing

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Black and white photograph of a Hispanic man holding a condom and embracing an African American who is slightly lower and looking upwards

Whitman-Walker Clinic, ca. 1990s

This interracial couple and straightforward acknowledgement of gay sex practices shows an effective trend in AIDS education campaigns. By the 1990s, AIDS organizations could speak honestly and directly to gay audiences, often without fear of censorship.

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Drawing of a naked person’s butt

No ifs, ands or butts...

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Drawing of a naked person’s butt

Whitman-Walker Clinic, ca. 1980s-1990s

Fear and stigma of people with AIDS came directly from confusing sexual practice with the people who engaged in it. This Whitman-Walker poster made the issue much clearer, noting that unprotected anal sex was dangerous, not the man, or woman, who was having it.

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Black and white photograph of a candle burning on a table next to a drawing of planet Earth

The Names Project AIDS Candlelight Memorial March

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Black and white photograph of a candle burning on a table next to a drawing of planet Earth

Whitman-Walker Clinic, 1992

In 1986, Cleve Jones of San Francisco stitched a quilt panel to memorialize a friend he had lost to AIDS. This began one of the world’s largest memorials for those who died from AIDS. By 1992, the AIDS Memorial Quilt had a panel from each state in the country. By 2012, the quilt had grown to more than 48,000 panels.

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Color drawing of the U.S. capitol dome with the American flag behind it, surrounded by a black background

Washington remembers, October 8th and 9th, 1988

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Color drawing of the U.S. capitol dome with the American flag behind it, surrounded by a black background

Whitman-Walker Clinic, 1988

The AIDS Memorial Quilt was first displayed in the nation’s capital in 1987. Containing nearly 2,000 panels, it drew more than half a million visitors, which prompted a nationwide tour. When the quilt returned to Washington, DC, the following year, the number of panels had quadrupled.

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Black and white photograph of a multiracial group of people smiling up at the viewer; another photograph of an African American doctor in a lab coat is below.

Whitman-Walter Clinic

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Black and white photograph of a multiracial group of people smiling up at the viewer; another photograph of an African American doctor in a lab coat is below.

Whitman-Walter Clinic, undated

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Yellow square road sign that says Caution above text

Caution, positive thinking alone won’t prevent AIDS

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Yellow square road sign that says Caution above text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

This poster from the Northwest AIDS Foundation reminded readers that all the positive thinking in Seattle (or the world) wouldn’t protect them from AIDS. However, taking precautions to have safer sex provided protection for everyone: “Because safe sex is the new rule of the road. Of that you can be positive.”

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Yellow square road sign that says Dead End above text

Dead end, this is the alternative to safer intercourse

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Yellow square road sign that says Dead End above text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

While some public health campaigns focused on asking people to make a choice between sex and having AIDS, this poster emphasized safer sex practices men could use, focusing on anal sex. The poster provided explicit recommendations and ended with a lighthearted tone designed to encourage change in Seattle’s gay community: “Be part of the new gay spirit. Follow the rules of the road.”

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Orange square road sign that says Detour over text

Detour, AIDS is not the end of the road

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Orange square road sign that says Detour over text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

The Northwest AIDS Foundation’s public health campaign worked to build a community around safer sex practices, noting sex with a condom as one of several new norms. This poster highlighted the Seattle gay community’s power to change minds and practices, putting responsibility with the community’s members with the call to action: “What you can do about AIDS.”

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Yellow square road sign that has black outline of car with curved lines behind it indicating curves in the roadway ahead above text

Don't let the fear of AIDS drive you out of control

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Yellow square road sign that has black outline of car with curved lines behind it indicating curves in the roadway ahead above text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

By the time this poster was distributed, tens of thousands more had been diagnosed with AIDS, causing panic. This poster directly addressed the fear by encouraging men to play safely in order to regain self-respect and self-control.

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Color photograph of a safety pin on a red sweater; the pin has a yellow roadside on it

Meet the safety pin

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Color photograph of a safety pin on a red sweater; the pin has a yellow roadside on it

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

An extension of the Northwest AIDS Foundation “Please Be Safe” campaign was the “Safety Pin,” a symbol that the wearer believed in and practiced safer sex. Efforts like this helped spread information about AIDS and created new community norms that stressed prevention and safety.

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Orange square road sign that says Men Working over text

Men working, good news for the 3 out of 4 gay men who follow the new rules of the road

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Orange square road sign that says Men Working over text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

Instead of asking the reader to choose between sex and safety, this poster made a strong case for practicing safer sex. It provided positive news about Seattle's gay community and advice for staying healthy for those who didn't carry the AIDS virus as well as those who did, stressing immediate personal action as a way to stay healthy: “So if you begin safer sex now, the odds are on your side.” The “Men Working” sign highlighted the effectiveness of these efforts: the actions of Seattle's gay community were keeping people healthy; preventing the spread of AIDS.

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Yellow square road sign that has two vertical arrows pointing in opposite directions, above text

Sexual safety is a two-way street

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Yellow square road sign that has two vertical arrows pointing in opposite directions, above text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

This poster emphasized the dual responsibility of taking care of oneself and one's sexual partner and used the protection of others as a powerful motivator to practice safer sex: “But don't forget that unsafe sex puts two lives at stake. don't let down your guard. don't let down your partner.”

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Yellow square road sign that has black line with another line branching off from it indicating branch in the roadway, above text

Sexual safety means making the right choice every time

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Yellow square road sign that has black line with another line branching off from it indicating branch in the roadway, above text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

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Yellow square road sign that has black outline of a person walking

Sexual safety, one step at a time

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Yellow square road sign that has black outline of a person walking

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

In the 1980s, the threat of AIDS could feel overwhelming: researchers, doctors, public health officials, friends, partners, and the media constantly presented new, and sometimes conflicting, information about the epidemic. The four steps outlined here—encouraging the reader to be a student, salesman, explorer, and fighter—stressed positive prevention strategies and emphasized developing new practices for pleasure.

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Yellow square road sign that says Slow above text

Slow, you don't need to slam into reverse to leave the fast lane

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Yellow square road sign that says Slow above text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

The Northwest AIDS Foundation “Please Be Safe” campaign promoted “a healthy, sexy gay life,” rather than advocating celibacy as the only option. The “Sexual Safety Card” provided a list of activities with a range of associated risks to help men make informed decisions about a variety of sexual activities, as well as a caution against using drugs and alcohol in excess, which could impair the good judgment described by this poster.

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Yellow square road sign that has black curved arrow indicating curves in the roadway ahead above text

The gay community takes a turn for the better

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Yellow square road sign that has black curved arrow indicating curves in the roadway ahead above text

Northwest AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s

In other cities, such as New York and San Francisco, people in gay communities argued over the best ways to protect themselves from AIDS without limiting some newly earned gay rights to be more open and sexual freedoms such as participating in bathhouse culture. The Northwest AIDS Foundation’s approach celebrated a successful response to living with/preventing the spread of AIDS from a unified community that included open discussions of sexual practices and how to best engage safely and responsibly.

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Drawing of an African American man with mustache wearing a jacket

Always use latex condoms

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Drawing of an African American man with mustache wearing a jacket

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

In this poster, South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN) used a straightforward approach to stress the importance of condom use for African American men, who did not initially consider themselves at risk for AIDS. SCAEN leaders also distributed free, gift-wrapped condoms to the female patrons of the beauty shop that served as their headquarters.

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Black and white drawing of an African American woman with her hands in her pocket, in a jacket looking at the viewer

AIDS—IT’S YOUR CHOICE, THINK!

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Black and white drawing of an African American woman with her hands in her pocket, in a jacket looking at the viewer

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

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Black and white drawing of an African American man holding an African American woman who is looking downwards and frowning

Baby, I could just die for you

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Black and white drawing of an African American man holding an African American woman who is looking downwards and frowning

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN) began in a small hair salon in South Carolina. The owner, DiAna DiAna, presented information about safer sex to women to help them navigate real-life situations such as pressure from a partner not to use a condom.

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Drawing of shirtless African American man in blue tattered pants and chains looking off to the left

Bound by the Chains of ignorance, Learn about AIDS

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Drawing of shirtless African American man in blue tattered pants and chains looking off to the left

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, ca. 1980s

As South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN) evolved, their posters adapted a more polished aesthetic but continued with a hand-drawn style and a simple message that spoke to a southern African American community.

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Black and white drawing of an African American young man in sunglasses and graduation gown.

Complete my education, teach me about AIDS: help me to live!

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Black and white drawing of an African American young man in sunglasses and graduation gown.

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

This South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN) poster reminded parents and grandparents of their responsibilities to educate younger people about AIDS.

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Black and white drawing of an African American man in a suit offering a needle to an African American woman who has her arms

Don’t shoot drugs, Don’t get AIDS!

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Black and white drawing of an African American man in a suit offering a needle to an African American woman who has her arms

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

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Black and white drawing of an African American woman sitting down, looking at the viewer

Learn to live, learn about AIDS

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Black and white drawing of an African American woman sitting down, looking at the viewer

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

This poster aims to encourage African American women to learn more about AIDS. The challenge persists to today African American women frequently underestimated their own risk for the disease. This persists today: in 2013, two out of every three newly diagnosed American women are black.

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Black and white drawing of an African American girl in a dress, holding a shotgun in one hand and AIDS informational booklets in the other.

Mommie, what do I take to a war on AIDS?

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Black and white drawing of an African American girl in a dress, holding a shotgun in one hand and AIDS informational booklets in the other.

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

Hairstylist DiAna DiAna and Dr. Brandi Sumpter founded South Carolina AIDS Education Network (SCAEN) to reach southern black women with information about AIDS for themselves and their families. By placing a rifle in the hands of the child pictured here, the activists suggested the gravity of the AIDS epidemic.

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Black and white drawing of an African American boy crying and half faced away from the viewer

My baby brother has AIDS and now he’s too sick to play with me anymore, daddy, why?

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Black and white drawing of an African American boy crying and half faced away from the viewer

South Carolina AIDS Education Network, 1988

AIDS could impact every member of a family, including boys and girls, brothers and sisters. Children in black communities have consistently been overrepresented in AIDS cases nationwide. As of 2013, African American children were twice as likely to be diagnosed with HIV than their white peers.

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Black and white photograph of a pregnant White woman holding her stomach.

A man who shoots up can be very giving, he can give you and your baby AIDS

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Black and white photograph of a pregnant White woman holding her stomach.

National Institute on Drug Abuse, ca. 1980s

This poster features a pregnant White woman whose male partner uses intravenous drugs. She is regarded as an infector of babies rather than as a person with AIDS deserving care.

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Black and white photograph of a pregnant African American woman holding her stomach looking at the viewer.

A man who shoots up can be very giving, he can give you and your baby AIDS

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Black and white photograph of a pregnant African American woman holding her stomach looking at the viewer.

National Institute on Drug Abuse, ca. 1980s

In the early 1990s, the National Institute on Drug Abuse called on women to seek treatment to protect their children, including those yet to be born, from AIDS. This poster features a pregnant African American woman whose male partner uses intravenous drugs. The accompanying text warned, “Babies with AIDS are born to die,” and suggested women get tested for HIV before becoming pregnant and use condoms to protect themselves.

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Black and white photograph of a pregnant Latina woman holding her stomach looking at the viewer.

A man who shoots up can be very giving, he can give you and your baby AIDS

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Black and white photograph of a pregnant Latina woman holding her stomach looking at the viewer.

National Institute on Drug Abuse, ca. 1980s

This campaign pictured women of all races, acknowledging that drug use happened in all communities, and emphasized that women should seek treatment as mothers. This poster features a pregnant Latina whose male partner uses intravenous drugs.

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Black and white photograph of run-down front room of a house with three people huddled together, with a fourth person walking out the front door.

A lot of people are getting stuck with AIDS

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Black and white photograph of run-down front room of a house with three people huddled together, with a fourth person walking out the front door.

AIDS Resource Center, Dallas, TX, ca. 1980s

This poster attempted to reach not only drug users, but their families and friends as well, in the hopes that by reaching the user’s social network, campaigns like this would be more successful in educating people on the dangers of sharing needles.

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Black and white photograph of a young woman standing against a wall with a young man in front of her, the image is repeated three times.

AIDS, think about it: first

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Black and white photograph of a young woman standing against a wall with a young man in front of her, the image is repeated three times.

New York City Department of Health, ca. 1980s

The cut-and-paste, zine-style of this poster suggested a youthful audience, while focusing the message on people who either did not have AIDS or had not yet been tested but could be engaging in risk behaviors.

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Drawing of a needle with a red blood spot near the tip, on a black background.

AIDS can blow your high, if you’re not going to stop, at least use clean needles

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Drawing of a needle with a red blood spot near the tip, on a black background.

Health Education Resource Organization, Baltimore, MD, 1987

Much of the outreach to drug users focused on getting people to “simply” stop using drugs. This poster from the Health Education Resource Center offered a message that focused on making risky behaviors safer.

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Drawing of a vertical needle with purple skull and crossbones where the handle is, on a black background.

Don't share needles, Don't get stuck with AIDS

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Drawing of a vertical needle with purple skull and crossbones where the handle is, on a black background.

Michigan Department of Public Health, AIDS Prevention Program, 1988

The grim image here makes a straightforward connection between needle-sharing, AIDS, and death. Campaigns like this one relied on fear as a motivator for people to take steps towards safer practice.

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Two color drawings, one of a Hispanic couple on a crowded multiracial subway, and the other an African American couple on the same subway car.

Carlos Y Carla: Libro De Illustraciones Sobre El SIDA. Bill and Brenda: AIDS Information Picture Book

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Two color drawings, one of a Hispanic couple on a crowded multiracial subway, and the other an African American couple on the same subway car.

New York City Department of Health, 1987

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Color photograph of a syringe.

Don't share.

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Color photograph of a syringe.

San Francisco AIDS Foundation, ca. 1980s-1990s

Straight and to the point, this poster presents a basic prevention technique aimed at anyone using needles.

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Color photograph of a hand injecting drugs into an arm.

Don't share!

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Color photograph of a hand injecting drugs into an arm.

Project Safe, Denver AIDS Prevention, 1988

Sharing needles became widely known as a dangerous practice in public health communities, but with little political will or funding to provide users with clean needles, some organizations chose to stress how to sterilize needles for reuse. This poster communicates a simple and cheap measure that would help prevent the spread of AIDS in intravenous drug user communities.

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White text that mimics chalk on a blackboard over a photograph of a needle. The words Famous last words are in red.

“Hey man, let me use your works,” famous last words

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White text that mimics chalk on a blackboard over a photograph of a needle. The words Famous last words are in red.

People of Color Against AIDS, ca. 1980s

By using a conversational and perhaps familiar line, this poster from the People of Color Against AIDS offered an example of a realistic situation that drug users may have experienced, along with a strategy to use if it came up.

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Color photograph of a line of syringes with a condom on the far right

If you won't kick an old habit, start a new one

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Color photograph of a line of syringes with a condom on the far right

AIDS Administration, Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, 1988

Risky behaviors could be made safer; sex with a condom or injecting with a clean needle both minimized the likelihood that a person with AIDS would pass it on to a partner. This poster offers both solutions, as well as appealing to the reader’s sense of responsibility to protect others by making choices to stay safe.

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Black and white photograph of a baby carriage next to it is hospital intravenous drip bag on a pole.

Most babies with AIDS are born to mothers or fathers who have shot drugs

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Black and white photograph of a baby carriage next to it is hospital intravenous drip bag on a pole.

National Institute on Drug Abuse, ca. 1980s

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Black and white photograph of a baby bottle next to text.

Guess who else can get AIDS if you shoot drugs, your baby can

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Black and white photograph of a baby bottle next to text.

National Institute on Drug Abuse, ca. 1980s

This poster advised pregnant women with a history of drug use and those with partners who used intravenous drugs to get an AIDS test, seek drug treatment, and use condoms.

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Red tinted photograph of a hand injecting drugs into an arm.

Share and you are a target for AIDS

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Red tinted photograph of a hand injecting drugs into an arm.

Tulsa Area Chapter of the American Red Cross, Tulsa, OK, ca. 1980s

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Color photograph of a smiling white boy (Ricky Ray) sitting in the grass

A national disaster

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Color photograph of a smiling white boy (Ricky Ray) sitting in the grass

publisher unknown, 1990s

Ricky Ray was the oldest of three boys, all of whom had hemophilia and contracted AIDS after receiving blood transfusions as babies. In 1987, when the Ray brothers, aged ten, nine, and eight, won the court-appointed right to attend school, arsonists destroyed their Florida home. In 1992, Ricky passed away from AIDS-related complications at age 15. The middle brother, Robert, also died of AIDS-related diseases when he was 22. In 2013, the youngest brother, Randy, is 33 and still alive.

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Color drawing of a multiracial group of school children, one of whom has a talk bubble above his head

AIDS News

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Color drawing of a multiracial group of school children, one of whom has a talk bubble above his head

People of Color Against AIDS Network (POCAAN), 1988

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American flag, with a frayed bottom and skull and cross bones instead of stars

AIDS is still a crisis

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American flag, with a frayed bottom and skull and cross bones instead of stars

unknown publisher, undated

The increasing apathy toward AIDS has had significant consequences for adolescents. Teens represent more than half of the estimated undiagnosed cases of HIV/AIDS in the United States; between 2006 and 2009, HIV diagnoses increased in people 15—24 years of age, despite a stable HIV diagnoses nationwide.

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Red tinted photograph of quilts on the Washington Mall

Ambition will cure AIDS before compassion does

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Red tinted photograph of quilts on the Washington Mall

Vertex Pharmaceuticals, 1998

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Three yellow stick figure people with the letter x in red on chest. Left one covering eyes, middle one ears, and right one mouth

Ignorance = fear, silence = death

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Three yellow stick figure people with the letter x in red on chest. Left one covering eyes, middle one ears, and right one mouth

Keith Haring Foundation, 1989

In the 1980s and 90s, artist Keith Haring’s widely recognized figures championed AIDS education and compassion, what was then a new cause. Today, Haring's foundation continues to support AIDS organizations nationwide, including AIDS Project Los Angeles, the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation, and Gay Men's Health Crisis.

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Color drawing of a green humanoid monster frowning and looking around a corner at the viewer

HIV liv pou kolore, sa sa ye?

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Color drawing of a green humanoid monster frowning and looking around a corner at the viewer

Brooklyn AIDS Task Force, 1987

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African American woman with blond hair and heavy makeup looking at the viewer

Make love not AIDS

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African American woman with blond hair and heavy makeup looking at the viewer

Hotstamp, 1998

RuPaul Andre Charles, a gay artist and icon, has long engaged in AIDS advocacy work whether as a partner in the make-up company MAC's AIDS awareness campaigns, a spokesperson for the AIDS Fund, or, as a model in this postcard riffing on the famous slogan “Make Love, Not War.”

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Black and white photograph of two white men embracing and kissing

Read my lips

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Black and white photograph of two white men embracing and kissing

ACT UP, 1988

Gran Fury, an artists' collective within ACT UP (The AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power), created iconic materials, including postcards, to spread information and promote education about HIV and AIDS. The mantra featured here subverts President George H. W. Bush's notable quip about no new taxes, delivered during the 1988 Republican National Convention, to call attention to his ambivalent support on AIDS outreach, education, research, and support.

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Black and white drawing of a smiling man wearing a cape, he has a bleach bottle for a head

The Adventures of Bleachman, Las Aventuras de Bleachman

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Black and white drawing of a smiling man wearing a cape, he has a bleach bottle for a head

San Francisco AIDS Foundation, 1988

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Color drawing of a green humanoid hair covered monster

The non-color AIDS, color me deadly coloring book

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Color drawing of a green humanoid hair covered monster

Coronado Neighborhood Council, 1987

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Three Latino men smiling at the viewer; two red-bordered photographs are below them, one showing a woman on a bed, the other a family

Tres hombres

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Three Latino men smiling at the viewer; two red-bordered photographs are below them, one showing a woman on a bed, the other a family

Fundación de Salud Novela, 1989

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American war deaths with various tally icons including cannons, airplanes, ships, and helicopters, while AIDS is represented by people

American War Deaths

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American war deaths with various tally icons including cannons, airplanes, ships, and helicopters, while AIDS is represented by people

Dan Kaufman Graphics, Washington, DC, 1995

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