Monterey Car Week has a way of turning concepts into conversation pieces, and INFINITI clearly wants in on the noise. At The Quail, the brand unveiled the QX65 Monograph, a sportback SUV concept designed to resurrect some of the daring that once made the FX a design icon.
INFINITI says this sleek two-row, midsize SUV pushes its “Artistry in Motion” philosophy forward, and if nothing else, the QX65 makes a statement. The proportions are bold, the stance is unapologetically athletic, and the detailing is far more ambitious than what’s been rolling out of INFINITI showrooms lately. If the FX was once the rule-breaker in the luxury crossover space, this Monograph wants to remind us that INFINITI still knows how to color outside the lines.

A Roofline That’s All Attitude
The defining feature here is the fastback silhouette. The roofline arcs dramatically before plunging into the tail, a design flourish that gives the QX65 an instant sense of speed, whether parked or in motion. Wide fenders and wheels shoved to the corners further amplify its stance. INFINITI calls it “muscular elegance.” We’d call it “FX with a 2025 haircut.”
Twilight in Motion
Then there’s the paint. The Twilight finish—an evolution of INFINITI’s Akane hue—shifts between reddish purple and shimmering gold depending on the light. It’s flashy, yes, but it works. Paired with gloss black trim and bronze accents that trace the roofline and grille, the QX65 looks properly exotic in the California sun.
The grille itself nods to Japanese bamboo forests, though this time INFINITI’s designers have “stirred the trees in a storm,” creating a more aggressive texture. A glowing badge sits dead center, flanked by piano key LED lighting that stretches nearly the full width of the nose. It’s dramatic, bordering on theatrical, but it’s the kind of theater that might actually get people to look twice at an INFINITI again.

Jet-Inspired Details, Designer Wheels
Around back, jet-inspired taillights extend outward with vertical fins, a design cue meant to add depth and speed. The rest of the tail is deliberately clean, letting the LEDs carry the drama. Massive 22-inch wheels with twisted, layered spokes mirror the roofline’s sense of movement and detail, proving that INFINITI is sweating the small stuff.
Concept Today, Reality Tomorrow?
Of course, all this concept-car bravado raises the usual question: how much of this makes production? INFINITI execs insist the QX65 Monograph is more than vaporware. “It’s a signal,” says Tiago Castro, VP of INFINITI Americas. The brand, which has spent the better part of a decade chasing relevance, clearly sees this as a pivot point.
The challenge will be execution. Will the Twilight paint, sculpted body, and bold roofline survive the translation to a real showroom model? And will the production QX65 carry the hardware—engines, tech, dynamics—to back up the design, or will it be another case of style over substance?
For now, the QX65 Monograph is a refreshing reminder that INFINITI hasn’t forgotten how to dream. Whether it can deliver on those dreams in the very crowded midsize luxury space remains the bigger story.
Source: Infiniti