top of page
black website page photo.jpg
youth hiv aids awareness posters

"What if it Were You?" is a community HIV/AIDS awareness project and youth AIDS poster contest dedicated to promoting every-day awareness, compassion, education and support for HIV/AIDS. Not only are we providing AIDS awareness and education to youth in our schools, but we also strive diligently to reduce the social stigmas of HIV/AIDS, while addressing some core issues in the fight against AIDS. Some of the issues we address that drive the epidemic are, racism, homophobia, poverty, domestic violence and addiction. It is important that youth, and adults for that matter, understand the correlation between these issues and HIV/AIDS. 


Thank you for your time, support, and compassion!


"Compassion is our cure."


~Bob Bowers-Founder and President of HIVictorious, Inc.

hiv aids awareness posters youth

Dear Friends,

Bob Bowers' work in Madison high schools to raise awareness about HIV has been very important to our community.  Bob puts a human face on the issue and he inspires all of us to think about how this challenge can be overcome, not how it might overcome us.  And I have no doubt that by raising awareness he has saved lives.  I'm so impressed with this work that I proudly hang the winners of his annual What if it were you? poster contest in my office to remind me of this issue every day. 

Madison Mayor
Dave Cieslewicz
 

“What If It Were You” asks a simple and direct question.

 

This worthy campaign, spearheaded by the compassionate advocates at HIVictorious and generously supported by many local businesses, asks an honest question to every individual. What would you do if you found out you were living with HIV? What will you do when confronted with the risk of contracting HIV through unprotected sex or drug use? HIV/AIDS affects everyone. Reminding all of Wisconsin that they may be at risk for this horrible virus, especially youth, tackles the ignorance and apathy that is much too pervasive within Wisconsin and its younger residents. The poster campaign involves young people, inspiring them to foster awareness and fight the indifference and stigma that cripples our fight against AIDS. “What if it Were You?” takes the battle to our schools, where prevention education and the struggle against ignorance should be more prevalent. AIDS Network is excited about this thoughtful and important awareness campaign. As more and more people  throughout Wisconsin test positive for HIV every year, “What If It Were You?” asks the candid and critical question.

~Dan Guinn

hiv aids awareness posters youth schools.jpg

Power Surge

by Bob Ickes

Collin Burke, a high school senior from Madison, Wisconsin, says he took art class “by accident.” The teacher soon had Burke and his classmates entering the “What If It Were You?” AIDS-poster contest. “We had to demonstrate ‘What would you do if you found you had AIDS,’ ” says Burke, 18. “My poster expresses that I would try to make the world understand the facts. You know, like a lightbulb going on.” He took first place out of 100 competitors; the poster (left) will decorate buses, hair salons and diners throughout Madison. Says AIDS activist Bob Bowers, who sponsors the program through HIVictorious.org, “We picked Collin’s poster and thought we knew everything about him—until he was interviewed by the media and we found out that his uncle died of AIDS before he was born.” Says Burke: “I wish I had known him.”

hiv posters aids poster awareness campaign contest what if it were you
hiv aids awareness posters youth

What if it Were You? is a poster contest designed to inspire youth to cultivate and communicate a more truthful, and inclusive perception of HIV/AIDS, promote prevention and compassion and aid the eradication of youth misconceptions and apathy.

What if it Were You? aims to compel youth to recognize and renounce stereotypes and stigma, and dispel misguided beliefs about not being at risk.

The contest is intended to empower youth to discover and define their own interpretation of the significance of HIV/AIDS and design a poster using words &/or images to portray their point of view and deliver an HIV prevention message that will be effectively received by their peers.

Allowing youth a voice and a means to convey their message will undoubtedly result in communication methods most likely to command the attention of and have the utmost influence on their peers.

What if it Were You? is a poster contest designed to inspire youth to cultivate and communicate a more truthful, and inclusive perception of HIV/AIDS, promote prevention and compassion and aid the eradication of youth misconceptions and apathy.

What if it Were You? aims to compel youth to recognize and renounce stereotypes and stigma, and dispel misguided beliefs about not being at risk.

The contest is intended to empower youth to discover and define their own interpretation of the significance of HIV/AIDS and design a poster using words &/or images to portray their point of view and deliver an HIV prevention message that will be effectively received by their peers.

Allowing youth a voice and a means to convey their message will undoubtedly result in communication methods most likely to command the attention of and have the utmost influence on their peers.

hiv aids awareness posters youth.jpg

What If It Were You?


“What if it were you?” That’s the question Madison, Wisconsin-based HIVictorious, Inc., has been posing to area high school students as part of a poster contest and campaign. Now entering its fourth round, the poster contest asks youth to imagine how they might feel if they discovered that they were HIV-positive and to respond through words and art. The entries are judged and winners are awarded with recognition from public officials and gift cards, but the real prize is the opportunity for youth to promote AIDS awareness, compassion, education, and support in their communities.
 

What If It Were You? is the brainchild of Bob Bowers, founder and president of HIVictorious, who has been speaking to ninth-grade health classes, among other sites, in Madison for the past six years. At the start, he was honing his own sense of empowerment as a person living with HIV/AIDS and learning more about the demographics of the disease. However, the spiking rates among men who have sex with men and among African Americans, in particular, motivated him to fine-tune his curriculum. “I was blown away and I had thought to myself, ‘How are we going to cure AIDS if we’re still calling our brothers and sisters [pejorative names]? We haven’t dealt with racism and homophobia. I really started to appreciate and understand how stigma and people’s judgments would continue to fuel this epidemic,” he relates. During his outreach, he often “gets in students’ faces,” challenging them to reflect on the consequences of using the n-word and f-word in their everyday life.
 

“Also, around the same time, I was pretty overwhelmed by the lack of everyday awareness about the disease. How can we expect infection rates to be down, particularly among youth not to mention in general, when people aren’t getting the awareness, when we’re not addressing the core issues? I was outraged and disgusted.”
 

He asked himself how he could be part of the solution rather than part of the problem. Over the course of several talks with his wife, Teresa, about the issues of racism and homophobia as forces that contribute to the epidemic, the persistent notion that many think they will not be infected by HIV, and the ubiquity of age-old and often fear-driven prevention messages, Bob became inspired.
 

What if the messages were fresh and delivered by the youth themselves rather than an ASO or other agency? What if the campaign took compassion as its starting point—and its destination? Bowers knew he loved working with youth and so the poster contest and campaign seemed like a good match.


At first, he didn’t know what the students would cook up after he had prepped them with an HIV 101, shared his own experiences, and directed them to the nonprofit’s Web site for more information. “In my [public] talks, people have said to me, ‘I don’t know how you’ve lived with [the disease] for twenty-seven years, I would have killed myself; I couldn’t have done it.’ Yet these are not the messages we’re getting.”


Instead of mechanical instruction (“wear a condom”), the students responded with human connection.


Instead of sledgehammer-like truisms, the students responded with subtlety and creativity.
 

Instead of despair, one student responded with hope. Instead of surrender, one student responded with perseverance.


They responded with hand drawn flowers and white flags being snapped in half; with computer-generated art and bold typography. “They responded with such profound messages: ‘I would teach the world to understand.’ ‘I’d refuse to be silenced,’” says Bob.
 

“I can’t begin to describe my gratitude, and the inspiration and hopefulness [I draw] from their messages. They really get it! They’re not [humdrum], like, ‘Thanks for teaching us about HIV….’ They really get it,” he says, touched that students wholly welcome him with affection and support. “Colin’s light bulb poster was the one that had the message, ‘I would teach the world to understand.’ On the evening news, he said, ‘Understanding goes a long way.’ I was like, ‘Wow!’ I get goosebumps, [this] coming from a high school student instead of a film star who wants to help people with AIDS! They get the broader message and that truly was the original intent of the project.” Along with invoking compassion. On that score, Bob feels the posters are very well done.


“Take, for example, the poster of the girl’s face with the tear: ‘I would smile through the tears.’ A friend of mine, an activist and a person living with AIDS, said, ‘Don’t you think that’s further stigmatizing?’ And I said, ‘What? I think it was one of the most honest and heartfelt responses. I smile through the tears on a regular basis! That’s a very positive message. You want it to say, I drown in my tears?!’”


The design of the campaign was shaped by other concerns. “I was not only discouraged by the lack of awareness but, and I’m sure this speaks to what goes on elsewhere beyond Madison, any time you typically see awareness for AIDS is in walks or rides, when people want money. ‘Let’s raise awareness but at the same time we want your money.’” Compounded with this is the difficulty of bringing different organizations onto the same page—or poster.
 

“My idea was to keep the awareness out there and to build some unity in our state as far as organizations, not just have the person who’s sponsoring the walk or the ride on the poster but to have all the organizations on there, giving people resources,” notes Bob. Yet an initial foray by the campaign into multi-organization support was felled by ideological differences, so Bob returned to a less institutionalized, more grass-roots approach, even if that meant returning to square-one for funding sources. The first round was actually launched with no funding at all. Funders, such as The Greater Milwaukee Foundation’s Johnson and Pabst LGBT Humanity Fund and PAPI, Inc., have stepped forward as the campaign has progressed.


On a shoestring budget, the posters have reached some amazing heights. Some of the winning posters from the contest have appeared on billboards, bus ads, and in malls and restaurants countywide, thanks to an initial grant. Local sponsors have also contributed. And the posters have attracted the interest and support from all corners of the world. Pearson Education, for instance, has reprinted some of them in one of its textbooks. Kaiser Hospitals have displayed them at their locations. Partnerships with the people of Tibet and Macy’s Passport Event have supported the campaign and have given the posters legs to travel to new venues.


The beauty of the supportive response lies in its unity, says Bob. “We brought these posters in without money, without vested interests, without paid use for the posters, though we ask for a small donation…It’s not about us but the students and their message.”
 

The unity has lately been strengthened by the participation of local lawmakers, Governor Jim Doyle, Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin and Madison, Wisconsin Mayor Dave Cieslewicz. Their support is not just pat-on-the-back lip service, either. Bob spotlights Congresswoman Baldwin’s heartfelt response to the titular question, now posted on the What If It Were You? Web site. He adds, “I’m so grateful to our mayor, as he has attended the events and presented the winning posters to the students. He’s hands-on. Granted, we’re not New York City, but for a city of only 200,000 people to have our mayor inspired and actively involved is pretty heartening.” The mayor has even hung several posters in his office, underscoring his commitment to awareness. Bob gets verklempt at the thought that the students’ messages have touched the mayor in a profound way. These officials have also invited winning students for a face-to-face visit in their offices.


The fourth round of the poster contest starts in mid-October and will involve two high schools, Edgewood High School and Memorial High School. Says Bob: “I would like to see this campaign continue; the messages are timeless—there’s no date, no fundraiser, they can be out there forever as far as I’m concerned. I hope they are.”

Chael Needle

youth hiv aids awareness posters what if it were you.jpg
hiv aids posters youth poster contest.jpg
HIV AIDS awareness posters youth campaign.jpg
black website page photo.jpg

Video of What If It Were You?, youth HIV/AIDS awareness poster campaign, featured by Teri Barr on My Madison TV News

Video of What If It Were You?, youth HIV/AIDS awareness posters featured on HBO's Hung

The Fire Within Documentary HIV AIDS DVD cover.jpg

Gritty, raw and very real, The Fire Within is a compelling feature-length documentary chronicling a year in the life of long-term AIDS survivor Bob Bowers.

bottom of page