Kox has created
artwork since childhood, and has painted in oils since 1963, and
acrylic with oil since 1975. He began exhibiting his visionary art
in 1988. His works have been exhibited in the United States, The
Bahamas, Australia, Germany, and England, and have appeared in the
New York Outsider Art Fair every year since 1993. His works also
appeared in six of the eight shows at the American Visionary Art
Museum in Baltimore, since it's opening.
Kox's apocalyptic
visionary paintings and gothic constructions confront us with God's
prophetic warnings and encrypted revelations.
Many of his
recent artworks [since 1998] are riddled with "bible codes"
[equidistant letter sequences] he finds in a computerized grid of
Hebrew letters.
Norbert Kox's
Apocalyptic Visual Parables sound a strong warning against the counterfeits
and dupes of modern Christianity and other world religions and philosophies.
Like the paintings of Matthias Grunewald and Hieronymus Bosch, Kox's
images can be extreme and disturbing.
"But there
are always flashes of light and spirit within the darkness - signs
of hope and renewal that are secretly inscribed in his own life
and flesh. Born to be wild (in keeping, perhaps, with the coincidence
of his birth on the very day that the atomic bomb was dropped on
Hiroshima) as a high school drop out he spent time in the Army in
Germany Returning to Green Bay after a lackluster military career,
Kox embarked upon an outlaw biker life of booze and drugs, making
an income from his work in an auto body shop. Having reached the
depths of despair in the mid to late 1970 led to a dramatic [spiritual]
experience, the renunciation of his former dissolute life, and a
ten-year retreat in the woods of northern Wisconsin where he prayed,
meditated, studied the scriptures, and preached his new found insight
into the hypocrisy of conventional life and religion. Returning
in the late 1980s from the wilderness Kox continued his religious
ministry by powerfully communicating God's most secret messages
through his intensely glowing paintings (he has developed his own
techniques of translucent acrylic glazing) and biblically haunted
found-object assemblages.Kox quietly and passionately persists in
his attempt to unveil the mysteries of God's strange missives to
humankind."
- Professor Norman J. Girardot