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Art Books That Serve Up Beauty and Depth

· 5 min read
Art Books That Serve Up Beauty and Depth
Books Newsletter Art Books That Serve Up Beauty and Depth

Our favorite art books for February, the writings of Claude Cahun, and an imaginative history of Michelangelo and Titian.

Natalie Haddad Natalie Haddad February 9, 2026 — 3 min read

What do Kaylene Whiskey and Pyaari Azaadi have in common? Both are women of color whose art can be visually breathtaking and conceptually powerful, with feminist underpinnings — and the subjects of recent art catalogs that we can’t put down. It’s hard to resist the joyous charm of Whiskey’s paintings, while the beauty and strength of Azaadi’s activist art make her publication (featuring an essay by Hyperallergic Editor at Large Hrag Vartanian) a must-read.

Also among the books we’re reading right now is the Equal Justice Initiative’s incisive study of Legacy Sites in Montgomery, Alabama, replete with compelling photographs that illustrate the struggle for racial justice in the United States. I highly recommend Otherhow by artist Joseph Grigley, who is deaf; the book offers an intimate, engaging, and essential record of personal advocacy and art-world ableism.

There’s plenty more on our reading list, and make sure to check out the book reviews linked below. —Natalie Haddad, Reviews Editor

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Summer Creative Writing Institute at the American University of Paris

Let Paris inspire you this summer and come join us at AUP’s Summer Creative Writing Institute. With workshops on poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction, students can work deeply on issues of craft, all while enjoying the City of Light.

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8 Art Books to Read This February

The trailblazing sculptural practice of Edmonia Lewis, the birth of modernism in Montmartre, the luminous paintings of Kaylene Whiskey, and Gainsborough’s alluring fashion portraits are among our favorite reads this month.View the full list

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Giving and Receiving: Memoirs of an Immigrant Curator and Philanthropist

Marica Vilcek shares her story in a new memoir, from her early life and escape from Czechoslovakia to her 30-year career at The Met, and the decision to create the Vilcek Foundation to champion immigrants in the arts.

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Book Reviews

 

Michelangelo and Titian’s Rivalry That May Never Have Been

William E. Wallace openly uses what he calls “informed imagination” to explore the relationship between the two masters in his new study. | Olivia McEwan

Michelangelo & Titian: A Tale of Rivalry and Genius by William E. Wallace

Claude Cahun’s Survival Guide for the Ages

A new translation of the French artist’s 1930 memoir is a kaleidoscopic collection of dialogues, sketches, and Blakean proverbs. | Joyelle McSweeney

Cancelled Confessions (or Disavowals) by Claude Cahun

Where Would Contemporary Art Be Without Plastic?

A new anthology on plastics in art reveals the philosophical conundrums and contradictions at the heart of a material the world relies on. | Louis Bury

Plastics by Anne Gunnison and David Joselit

More Renaissance Reads

The Beautiful Pagan Soul of Piero di Cosimo

A new book provides an ideal introduction to a Renaissance painter largely known only to specialists, but who was counted among the most important of his generation. | Ed Simon

Why Are Giorgione’s Paintings So Mysterious, Even Centuries Later?

We know precious little about the painter’s life, and we know even less about his work’s meaning. A new book argues that the artist wanted it that way. | Lauren Moya Ford