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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.

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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11 Images

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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