Organized by Visual AIDS, “Love Positive Women” is a project that distributes hundreds of hand-crafted Valentine's Day cards to women living with HIV.
[How Anthony Daley Abstracts Rubens](https://hyperallergic.com/799845/how-anthony-daley-abstracts-rubens/) [Shalom and Pass the Joint ](https://hyperallergic.com/799710/shalom-and-pass-the-joint-jewish-heritage-cannabis/) [Basking in Vermeer’s Light at Rijksmuseum](https://hyperallergic.com/800021/basking-in-vermeers-light-at-rijksmuseum/) “Why not do something nice for the women most forgotten about?,” LPW founder Jessica Whitbread asks in a text for the project. LPW acknowledges the challenges of living with HIV as a woman while navigating the healthcare system, interpersonal relationships, and motherhood, and aims to boost awareness around the specificity of these social side effects. [A Dazzling and Troubling Display of Spanish Expansion](https://hyperallergic.com/800245/a-dazzling-and-troubling-display-of-spanish-expansion-hispanic-society-royal-academy/) [Icons of Black American History, Illustrated ](https://hyperallergic.com/795992/icons-of-black-american-history-illustrated-george-mccalman/) From tender words of care and encouragement to carefully arranged accessories such as beads, yarn, lace, and sequins, an overwhelming amount of love pours from each card. From February 2 through February 5, over 500 handmade Valentines were mounted on the walls of one of the museum’s second-floor galleries alongside a video work detailing the history and impact of the initiative. Don’t underestimate the value in something as simple as sending a valentine to a stranger.” With the help of Brooklyn-based paper-making mill Dieu Donné, LPW has invited artists, activists, and community members to design hand-crafted Valentine’s Day cards to distribute internationally to women living with HIV. The cards were sent off quickly in order to reach their destinations by the holiday.