

Another Tronson du Coudray art work 'Fresh Insights' has highlighted an artistic work that creates visions of opportunity and development.
'Fresh Insights' celebrates the hopes and aspirations of all things new, developing and planning .... Tronson du Coudray has been enjoying some art in the post New Year period.
His wife of 39 years Delma Tronson says that although he varies his style, from her perspective, the ones she appreciates the most represent this genre in format, as depicted in 'Fresh Insights' where the viewer if left to imagine the dimensions of the art work.
In this instance, the various green shades as a back drop provides the imagery of growth and an in-kind development imagery without candour or haemorrhage, where as the magnetism of the finished work with its fine lines illustrates direction.
This is centered around the ideas of hope and aspirations, of all things new, developing and planning .... it's never ending, the pursuit is iconoclastic and available to anyone who has the eyes to see.

Dynamic
Many of Tronson du Coudray's art works have this self evident agenda whereby the viewer is transported to some far away place where imagery, joy, satisfaction, fulfillment are resplendent.
The dynamic of the visual art is such whereby the ground swell of an open swather is engulfed with a single mindedness of opportunism whereby the viewer is able to not only grasp the intent but express within their spirit a door that swings in both directions so as to maximise the heart felt treasure embodied in the visual.
In this instant the black upon the green embodies both direction and astonishment. The lines are crisp and memorising. The actions of the brush stroke illustrate that nothing is quite as it seems yet everything is exactly as it should be.
The artistic measure is not in its immediate visual, rather it its non-visual, where the spirit leads the viewer into a a world of the unknown, the world of hope, aspiring the new, rejoicing in the development and the wonder of its planning.

Tronson du Coudray
Mark Tronson turned semi-professional as an artist in 1999 when living in Moruya south coast NSW and in 2003 the Basil Sellers Art Centre was opened in Moruya and a year later the $15,000 Basil Sellers Moruya Art Prize was developed.
From this foray into art prizes Mr Basil Sellers AM developed the $100,000 Sport-Art Prize at the Ian Potter Museum of Art in the University of Melbourne.
Mark Tronson developed his stage (art) name at this time from his Tronson du Coudray ancestral French history which has stuck for his many artistic contributions. In 2006 after the Tronson's relocated to Tweed Heads northern NSW on the border with Coolangatta Qld he opened his Basil Sellers Art Studio.
He displayed regularly in his own exhibitions in both Tweed Heads and Tweed Heads South and as his ministry grew including Country Town Tours linking in with regional and rural art communities, and he withdrew from exhibiting to taking on Commissions.
A most remarkable trilogy commission by Basil Sellers was on Sport with the three art works titled Anguish, Confusion, Hope.
In 2011 the Laguna Quays Respite cottage was established for missionaries and in 2013 Basil Sellers and Mark Tronson collaborated for the Basil Sellers Midge Point $2000 Annual Art Prize. As a member of the Tweed Heads Chamber of Commerce he provides a small art work for their monthly breakfast 'business card' draw.
To commission an art work from Tronson du Coudray 0419 917 713 timeout@bushorchestrA.COM

Dr Mark Tronson is a Baptist minister (retired) who served as the Australian cricket team chaplain for 17 years (2000 ret) and established Life After Cricket in 2001. He was recognised by the Olympic Ministry Medal in 2009 presented by Carl Lewis Olympian of the Century. He mentors young writers and has written 24 books, and enjoys writing. He is married to Delma, with four adult children and grand-children.
Mark Tronson's archive of articles can be viewed at http://www.pressserviceinternational.org/mark-tronson.html