Collections
Shop for artwork based on themed collections. Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Artwork
Each image may be purchased as a canvas print, framed print, metal print, and more! Every purchase comes with a 30-day money-back guarantee.

Oscar by Debra Hurd

Willie Nelson Booger Red by Debra Hurd

Birth of Cool by Debra Hurd

Night Tripper by Debra Hurd

Dr. King by Debra Hurd

Bob Marley Robert Nesta Marley by Debra Hurd

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. by Debra Hurd

Jimi Hendrix by Debra Hurd

Make Music #3 by Debra Hurd

Hot Jazz three by Debra Hurd

Make Music #2 by Debra Hurd

Make Music by Debra Hurd

Jimi's Music by Debra Hurd

John Coltrane Live by Debra Hurd

Dizzy Gillespie by Debra Hurd

Improv by Debra Hurd

Shades by Debra Hurd

Half Way There by Debra Hurd

Mr. Roger's neighborhood by Debra Hurd

Mark by Debra Hurd

Happy Hank by Debra Hurd

Fred by Debra Hurd

The Girls by Debra Hurd

Making Jazz by Debra Hurd
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About Debra Hurd
\"Art and music are my passions but it\'s all art to me.\"
Internationally acclaimed artist Debra Hurd studied art at both Southern University in Chattanooga, Tennessee and the Ringling School of Art and Design in Sarasota, Florida. For 15 years she was a graphic designer in Florida and Austin, Texas.
She is also an accomplished pianist, having studied music since early childhood. Debra\'s wild boogie-woogie and honky-tonk style still finds her in the recording studios and at live performances in Austin. She loves jazz, classical, and salsa styles, too.
As a painter, Debra is famous for her insightful paintings of animals, her vivid city scenes and her passionate and perceptive depictions of jazz, rock, and blues musicians. Being a musician, she has both a great respect and a feel for the emotions of musicians of the past and present. She works in oils, using a knife to get bold and instant color. She finds the knife to be a great tool of expression. She reaches the observer through the use of dramatic color and texture.
Debra explains: \"A very ordinary scene can be perceived differently when painted with a bit of exaggerated color and awareness of light. The ordinary then becomes the extraordinary. Color is critical. When I\'m asked which color is my favorite, I tend to think in terms of which two or three colors I like in combination.\"