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Welcome to the
WoodLtdŽ Studio art door gallery. Here you will find examples of our
fine custom artistic doors with Sphinx, Athena, Greek, Roman,
Egyptian and mythology carvings. Our art doors are perfectly
suitable for interior or exterior use. Solid teak and teang wood are
kiln dried to moisture content of 10%. If you truly want to
differentiate your home, giving it a touch of art, beauty and
history with an elegant carving on the wood, the WoodLtdŽ art door
is just for you.
Our hand-crafted doors are new build by
talented Thai craftsmen. These doors are being made of Burmese
first-grade teak, with fir for the frame and door jamb. Having the
door frame, the jamb built by local craftsman will add personality,
pride and beauty. The rough opening for these doors can be of any
size. We export our doors to all continents, our key markets are
United States, Canada, European Union and Australia.
Art the use of skill and
imagination in the creation of aesthetic objects, environments, or
experiences that can be shared with others. The term art may also
designate one of a number of modes of expression conventionally
categorized by the medium utilized or the form of the product; thus
the term art can refer to painting, sculpture, filmmaking, music,
dance, literature, and many other modes of aesthetic expression, and
all of them are collectively called the arts. The term art may
further be employed to distinguish a particular object, environment,
or experience as an instance of aesthetic expression, as distinct
from others of its ilk.
Traditionally, the arts are divided into the fine arts and the
liberal arts. The latter are concerned with skill of expression in
language, speech, and reasoning. The fine arts, a translation of the
French beaux-arts, are more concerned with purely aesthetic ends,
or, in short, with the beautiful. Many forms of expression combine
aesthetic concerns with utilitarian purposes; pottery, architecture,
metalworking, and advertising design may be cited as examples. It
may be useful to conceive of the various arts as occupying different
regions along a continuum that ranges from purely aesthetic purposes
at one end to purely utilitarian purposes at the other. This
polarity of purpose is reflected also in the related terms artist
and artisan, the latter understood as one who gives considerable
attention to the utilitarian. This should by no means be taken as a
rigid scheme, however. Even within one form of art, motives may vary
widely; thus a potter or a weaver may create a highly functional
work that is at the same time beautiful - a salad bowl, for example,
or a blanket - or may create works that have no purpose whatever
beyond being admired.
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