This year, we read too many incredible books to count — here are a few that stuck with us, including tomes on Marsha P. Johnson, Mary Cassatt in Paris, and Ruth Asawa and mothering.
While 2025 might be drawing to a close, the art books we read this year will stay with us for a long time to come. And not just the monographs or catalogs you might be thinking of — we also consumed biographies, academic titles, memoirs, zine re-issues, art novels, and more. My personal favorite was Imani Perry’s Black in Blues; it doesn’t necessarily fit the mold of an “art book,” per se, and that’s precisely what makes it such a rich addition to any artist or art-lover’s shelves. Editor-in-Chief Hakim Bishara recommends Hew Locke’s latest catalog, while Editor-at-Large Hrag Vartanian offers us a spate of books, including Tamara Lanier’s moving account of her fight to reclaim the daguerreotypes of her enslaved ancestors, Renty and Delia. We’ve also got new categories this year to help guide your browsing. Enjoy, and, as ever, let us know what art books made it onto your list! —Lakshmi Rivera Amin, associate editor
Emily Mason: Unknown to Possibility, edited by Elisa Wouk Almino |Rizzoli Electa, September 2025
This monograph on the late abstract painter Emily Mason interrogates and beautifies the conceptualization of artistic merit. Essays by those who knew her and were impacted by her, including a series of intimate letters from curator and writer Naz Cuguoğlu, coalesce to offer a poignant picture of why we’re drawn to Mason’s art and, more importantly, how we should honor artists who believe they will change us — because they do. —Nereya Otieno