Deborah Kass employs the visual motifs of post-war painting to explore the intersection of politics, popular culture, art history and personal identity. Kass's work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, The Jewish Museum and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; The New Orleans Museum of Art, and the National Portrait Gallery, among others. Recent group shows include "Eye Pop: The Celebrity Gaze" at the National Portrait Gallery, "Come Together Sandy," Industry City, Brooklyn, 2013, "I, You, We" at the Whitney Museum of American art, 2013, and "Regarding Warhol: Sixty Artists, Fifty Years" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, 2012. Recent solo exhibitions include "feel good paintings for feel bad times," "MORE feel good paintings for feel bad times" and "My Elvis+" at Paul Kasmin Gallery. In 2012, The Andy Warhol Museum hosted "Deborah Kass: Before and Happily Ever After, a Mid-Career Retrospective." Her historical series from 1998 "America's Most Wanted" had its first ever viewing in New York at Sargent's Daughters in May 2015. Paul Kasmin Gallery presents a new body of work "Black and Blue" in December 2015.