Purpose of "The Picture of Dorian Gray" by Oscar Wilde

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The book, The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde is one that has many purposes in it. One purpose in the book shows how individuals can slowly deteriorate because of the evil lying within themselves. The major purpose of this novel is how much power art has over others. When an artist composes a great piece of work, he puts his heart into it. Part of that person is invested into it’s creation, which makes it more than just a statue in a museum, or a picture on the wall. In the novel, more than the artist’s heart is put into his painting. Basil Hallward, a very talented artist, paints an amazing lifelike portrait of Dorian Gray. From the moment that these two met, it was clear that Hallward was infatuated with Gray. The painting changes Dorian Gray’s life in many different ways. He had simply asked to stop aging and it happened, the portrait aged for him. This being so, the portrait ages with years and grows very old like a real human being would. The picture becomes the driving force in Dorian’s life. He may have once been a very good person, but his conscience was in the painti...

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