Cox is best known for his large works featured at many Toronto-area landmarks, including: •
Spring Break-Up (Fish Fountain), 1958, Park Hyatt Hotel, Avenue Road north of Bloor St., Toronto. (Moved in March 2018 to Ingram Gallery, 24 Hazelton Avenue, while the hotel is being renovated.) This sculpture is one of the first non-architectural decorative sculptures introduced into Toronto for the purpose of making the courtyard of a building more attractive. •
Draped Figures, 1959, at
Victoria University, University of Toronto (Note: these three sculptures were put into temporary storage in 2014). This work has been described as one that "hinted at the abstraction to finally come to the city...change was around the corner, and in the 1960s Toronto did finally experience a revolution in public sculpture." •
Great White Lady, 1960, on display at
McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario. •
The Garden of the Greek Gods, 1963, comprising twenty sculptures and a marker stone. On public display at
Exhibition Place in Toronto until 2014. Since then, the sculpture garden has been hidden behind the fences of Muzik Nightclub, now called Toronto Event Centre. •
The Days of the Year, 1968, bronze and glass, Macdonald Block (Ontario Government building), Toronto (temporarily in storage during building renovations). Among other leading Canadian sculptors of the 1960s, Cox was chosen to produce a work of public art for this huge new government building. It is one of his rare constructive pieces. •
Youth and the Environment, 1972, on display at Exhibition Place in Toronto. •
Bear Family, c.1970, on display at Centre Island, Toronto. • ''A Druid's Alphabet,'' 1961, two large door panels, on display at Glendon Campus,
York University, Toronto. • Bears in limestone (3), 1970–1971, on display at Exhibition Place in Toronto. •
Bear, 1979, on display at the
Guild Inn, Scarborough (created with assistance from Michael Clay). •
Seated Lady, 1967, on display at the Peel County Court House in Brampton, Ontario. •
Books 1967, on display in front of
Richmond Hill High School, Richmond Hill, Ontario. ==
Garden of the Greek Gods controversy and relocation==