READ
London, 1890: the beautiful young Dorian Gray sits for a portrait by the painter Basil, and, egged on by Lord Henry, makes a reckless wish — that he stay forever young while the painting bears the years instead. From then on he shines in public while the canvas, locked away, grows uglier by the day.
Cover Feature — A Beautiful Man Who Refused to Age
The Picture of Dorian Gray in 10 Minutes: The Beautiful Man Never Ages, the Man in the Painting Rots in His Place
London, 1890: the beautiful young Dorian Gray sits for a portrait by the painter Basil, and, egged on by Lord Henry, makes a reckless wish — that he stay forever young while the painting bears the years instead. From then on he shines in public while the canvas, locked away, grows uglier by the day.
Picture a twenty-year-old man walking into a room, and every head turns. He smiles, and every heart in the room quietly sighs. But twenty years later, thirty years later, fifty years later, his face hasn't changed at all. The guests are now the grandchildren of the guests who first watched him walk in, and he is still twenty. He never looks closely into mirrors as he passes them, because he knows the mirror lies — the truth is upstairs, in the attic, in the one painting he lets no one near.
This is Oscar Wilde's love letter to the Victorian age, and its verdict too. It is the story of a beautiful man who spends his soul like pocket change, until there is none left to spend, and then spends it again anyway. By the end you will see: staying young was never a gift.
In London at the end of the nineteenth century, an Irish playwright in his early thirties wrote the only novel he would ever write. It was branded a poisonous book the moment it appeared, held up as a textbook case of moral corruption — and the more it was denounced, the more famous it became, until it grew into the loudest literary scandal of the late Victorian era. But it is remembered today not for the scandal. It is remembered because it turned beauty from an adjective into a disease.
Later readers usually file it under Aestheticism: life as a work of art, morality as an inconvenient frame. But it goes further than that movement ever did — it takes the fantasy of living beautifully and makes it literal, letting a living man have a painting rot in his place.
Note 01 — A Novel With No Name
The Yellow Book
Not long after Sibyl Vane’s death, Lord Henry gives Dorian an unsigned French novel bound in yellow paper. Its story — a young Parisian who tries every sensation life has to offer — becomes something like an instruction manual; Dorian goes on to live the rest of his life as its footnote.
He later has it bound in different colours for different moods and locks it away in the deepest drawer of his study. That a single book could take over a life this completely may be the coldest small detail in the whole novel.
An unsigned book that had already written someone’s life for him.
A man brave enough to hide himself is brave enough to forget himself.
London, 1890
Dorian Gray, twenty years old, fair-haired, the porcelain doll London society has just decided to adore. He is the man in the painting, and the patient the whole book is diagnosing.
Basil Hallward, the painter, the man who put that face on canvas. He looks at Dorian the way he looks at his own lost youth — loving him to the point of trembling, afraid of it in equal measure, and eventually dying in the attic for that love. He is the one person in the book still willing to urge anyone toward goodness.
Lord Henry Wotton, the third man to enter. A philosopher, a hedonist, a mouth that could talk any young man into the gutter. He is not a villain — he simply believes that leading people astray is the most elegant sport there is. He mixes the poison; he never drinks it himself.
CREATE
How This Edition Was Made
A tarnished photogravure style built for beauty gone wrong: fix a style, draw three boards, keep one face from ever ageing.
Tarnished Gilt Photogravure
A look modelled on late-nineteenth-century photogravure — a touch of grain, a gold-leaning sheen, black-and-white layered under warm gilt. Ornament borrows Wilde-era acanthus scrollwork and gilt borders, but the gold is dulled, never bright.
Character · World · Composition
Process Credits
Back Into the Book
The finished plates return to the chapters, appearing at each moment the portrait changes — an image standing beside the reader every time.
A book about how beauty corrodes should let its own pictures corrode a little too.
Single-image world · recipes in the open
MAKE
See the work, take the recipe
Every image lays its recipe bare — see one you like, take the prompt.

Storyboard — Pixar 3D 8-panel sequence (gpt-image-2)

Urban 3D LED Display

Novel Scene 3D Poster

Emotional Film Photography

E-commerce Main Image - Miniature Diorama Skincare Advertisement

Floating Country Island Diorama
Taste · Method
METHOD
A wall of references — each makes an aesthetic claim before the AI illustrates a book.

















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Hover an image to see its visual signature (light, composition, medium…).
From the journal
















