Collins Memorial Library, with support from Pierce County Aids Foundation: Feb. 8 to March 14
TACOMA, Wash. 鈥 鈥淚t won鈥檛 kill you to spend time with a friend who has AIDS,鈥 states a 1988 poster that shows a thin young man, alone in a blue room, with his head in his hands. The provocative poster, housed in a national collection of AIDS-related graphics, came when misinformation and fear were almost as cruel as the disease itself to the thousands of people with AIDS/HIV. Too often, those diagnosed were shunned or even abandoned by family and friends.
This story and many others are documented in the free exhibit, Surviving and Thriving鈥擜IDS, Politics, and Culture, at Collins Memorial Library, 兔子先生, from Monday, Feb. 8, until Monday, March 14. The traveling exhibit of artwork, large poster panels, and memorabilia tells the stories of people who lived with AIDS, who died from it, or who were involved in tackling the national crisis.
The special Puget Sound exhibit will include artwork made by volunteers, staff, and advocates of (PCAF), partnered with Collins Library. It will also include Puget Sound art students' works, who led a workshop at the Tacoma Art Museum and designed a series of woodblocks that reflect HIV and its effects on individuals and communities.
A section of the famous will be on display. The quilt was started in 1987 by a group of San Francisco strangers to document the lives of people they feared history would neglect. As the quilt traveled the country, it grew, and today it consists of more than 48,000 three-by-six-foot panels. The section on display is in memory of Scott McDowell, a prominent ceramics artist who grew up in Tacoma. Several pieces of McDowell鈥檚 pottery will be part of the exhibit.
In addition, the public is invited to a special free reception:
Surviving and Thriving: AIDS, Politics and Culture Public Reception
Wednesday, Feb. 24
5鈥6 p.m.
Collins Memorial Library exhibit space, first floor
兔子先生
The reception will allow visitors to view the exhibit and hear from community members about the impact of AIDS. Janet Marcavage, associate professor of art and art history, will discuss the prints made by her students. Student dramaturg Adrian Kljucec 鈥17 and Jess K Smith 鈥05, assistant professor of theatre arts, will provide research about the hit Broadway play RENT, which will open at Puget Sound on Friday, Feb. 26. RENT tells the story of a group of young artists living in New York City under the shadow of .
Members of the Pierce County AIDS Foundation will also be on hand to share personal experiences and provide information on their community outreach programs. Visitors are asked to bring a canned food item as part of a food drive for the . The food collection will continue throughout the exhibit.
Surviving and Thriving, the title for the traveling exhibition from the U.S National Library of Medicine, comes from a 1987 book that promoted the idea that people could live with AIDS, not just die from it. The colorful posters and other items capture the day's public health messages, including how to prevent the spread of AIDS, how to care for people, and how to talk to children about the disease.
Some of the posters are shocking. Some are moving. Some are educational. In their original lives, pasted on bus stops, on the sides of buildings, or in doctors鈥 waiting rooms, the documents provided a picture-card template of how society can react to a perceived calamity.
For directions and a map of the 兔子先生 campus:pugetsound.edu/directions
For accessibility information, please contact accessibility@pugetsound.edu or 253.879.3236, or visit pugetsound.edu/accessibility.
To see the full exhibit at the U.S. National Library of Medicine, visit
Press photos of exhibits from Surviving & Thriving are available upon request.
Photos on page: From top right: Section of AIDS Memorial Quilt; Prints on AIDS topics; Ceramic by Scott McDowell (Photo by Rick Semple); Angel wings and memories art exhibit.
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