"Can Graphic Design Save Your Life?" at London's Wellcome Collection looks at how graphic design influences our views on health and medicine. These Help Remedies packages were designed by brand agency Pearl Fisher make it easy for consumers to find the cure for what ails them.
Courtesy Wellcome Collection
The Human Body, launched by Tinybop in 2013, is an app that teaches children about their anatomy. The artwork was done by Kelli Anderson.
Courtesy Wellcome Collection
Silence=Death was an activist collective that aimed to raise awareness about AIDS at the height of the crisis. Their poster, designed by Avram Finkelstein in 1987, was also adopted by the advocacy group ACT UP.
Courtesy Wellcome Collection
To make the Hospital Sant Joan de Déu in Barcelona a more inviting space for kids, Dani Rubio Arauna Studio and Rai Pinto Studio created playful, somewhat hidden animal shapes in pleasing colors.
Courtesy Victoria Gil
Cancerfonden, the Swedish Cancer Society, made headlines in 2016 when Facebook removed an animated breast cancer awareness video showing women how to conduct their own breast exams. To get around this, the organization changed the animated breasts from circles to squares.
Courtesy Wellcome Collection
Designer Biman Mullick spent decades campaigning against smoking through inventive posters, like this one for the Clean Air campaign against air pollution in London.
Courtesy Wellcome Collection
Street artist Stephen Doe paints an educational mural about Ebola symptoms in Liberia in 2014.
Dominique Faget/AFP/Getty Images
Abram Games was one of Britain's most famous poster designers. This anti-malaria poster from 1941 was one of many posters commissioned by the British War Office during WWII.
Courtesy Estate of Abram Games
"Der Mensch als Industriepalast (Man as Industrial Palace)" from physician Fritz Kahn's 1926 volume "Das Leben des Menschen" ("The Life of Man") depicted the body's different systems as industrial processes.
Courtesy Wellcome Collection
This 1986 poster for the Dutch Red Cross was illustrated by Dick Bruna, the artist behind the famous Miffy picture books.
Courtesy Mercis B.V.
These stamps from around the world spread the anti-smoking message far and wide.