INBOX: Jan Cox – Episode 3: How Can You Keep the Remembrance of an Artist Current? Philippe Pirotte's Choice

© Jan Cox/SABAM Belgium — image:M HKA

Nieuwjaarskaart, 1957

Print , 23,5 x 19,5 cm (framed: 39 x 38,5 cm)
woodcut and ink on paper

Cox’s work is characterised by carefully constructed compositions with a magical, surreal atmosphere, gestural energy, and a vivid colour palette echoing the Cobra artists, with recurring references to violence, cruelty, and vulnerability. In his final works, he increasingly confronts the horror humans inflict upon one another — an obsession rooted in his experiences in the lead-up to the Second World War. Papageno symbolises the animal side of human nature, living autonomously in harmony with the natural world — representing the sensual, instinct-driven side of humanity over reason.