MODERATOR: Gentlemen, thank you for joining us to discuss the work before us—two portraits by Ralph Rumpelton depicting Bob Dylan and George Harrison. Mr. Thornberry, shall we begin with you?
REGINALD THORNBERRY III: adjusts cufflinks with visible disdain
Begin? Must we? Very well. What we have here is the visual equivalent of a child's fever dream executed during a particularly uninspired art therapy session. The proportions are grotesque—and not in the intentional, Bacon-esque manner, but rather in the "I've never actually seen a human face" manner. That nose on Dylan could double as a ski slope for discouraged mice. And the texture! It appears Rumpelton has confused pointillism with simply giving up halfway through and stabbing the canvas repeatedly with a dirty brush.
The color palette suggests someone who learned about sky blue from a defective crayon and decided that was sufficient research. This isn't art—it's evidence that MS Paint has fallen into the wrong hands.
DR. HORACE PLIMWELL: leaning back with fingers steepled
Ah, but Reginald, you see only with the tyrannical eye of the academy! What you dismiss as "incompetence" is, in fact, a radical interrogation of portraiture's hegemonic expectations. Rumpelton operates in what I call the "neo-primordial aesthetic space"—a deliberate rejection of Renaissance perspectival violence in favor of an almost... pauses dramatically ...pre-cognitive authenticity.
Consider the noses—yes, the noses! They are not failures but rather ontological declarations. Rumpelton understands that Dylan and Harrison exist not as mere flesh, but as cultural signifiers whose physiognomy must be exaggerated to the point of symbolic saturation. The profile view creates a liminal dialogue between viewer and subject, a refusal of the frontal gaze's colonial implications.
THORNBERRY: takes a long sip of wine worth more than the average car payment
"Pre-cognitive authenticity." Good God, Horace, have you finally graduated from gibberish to complete nonsense? The only thing "radical" here is how radically terrible this is. I've seen more sophisticated work on refrigerators in suburban kitchens. At least those have the excuse of being made by actual children rather than—what did you call him?—the "missing link between outsider naïveté and post-digital sub-sublimity"?
PLIMWELL: undeterred, warming to his subject
You mock what you cannot comprehend! Rumpelton's use of digital medium—the very MS Paint you sneer at—is itself a meta-commentary on democratized art-making in the post-Web 2.0 landscape. By choosing the most humble of tools, he strips away the bourgeois pretensions of oil and canvas, of galleries and gatekeepers—
THORNBERRY: —and replaces them with incompetence and delusion. The texture you describe as "pointillist innovation" is simply the digital equivalent of a rash. And that background! That insipid, monotonous blue! It's as if Rumpelton discovered exactly one color and thought, "This will do for everything—sky, background, existential void."
PLIMWELL: The blue IS the void, Reginald! It represents the ineffable space between musical genius and visual representation, the chromatic resonance of two titanic figures suspended in the eternal now of our collective cultural memory. Notice how both figures face away—from us, from each other—suggesting the fundamental isolation of the artistic soul even in proximity to kindred spirits.
THORNBERRY: They're facing away because if Rumpelton attempted a frontal view, we'd be subjected to two symmetrical catastrophes instead of merely two profile disasters. The man can't even maintain consistent texture within a single portrait—look at Harrison's hair! Is it hair? Is it a series of black scribbles? A void where hair should be?
PLIMWELL: growing passionate
Yes! Precisely! The hair becomes non-hair, enters a state of material ambiguity that challenges our very conception of—
THORNBERRY: —of what hair looks like. Which he clearly doesn't know. And the facial hair on Dylan! Those dots! Did Rumpelton think he was depicting Dylan mid-transition into some sort of stippled phantom? Is this Dylan or Dylan as interpreted by someone who's only heard him described over a poor phone connection?
PLIMWELL: You insist on literalism, on representational fidelity, when Rumpelton invites us to experience these icons through the filter of imperfect memory, of cultural mythology made manifest through deliberately "naïve" mark-making. This is portraiture as archaeology, as excavation of cultural sediment!
THORNBERRY: refilling wine glass
This is portraiture as punishment. As assault. If Dylan and Harrison ever saw these abominations, they'd immediately retire from public life to spare themselves further indignity. The only thing being excavated here is the bottom of the barrel.
PLIMWELL: And yet—and yet!—these images possess an undeniable power, a magnetic pull that—
THORNBERRY: —that makes one want to look away, yes. Like a traffic accident painted by someone who's never seen traffic, accidents, or paint.
PLIMWELL: sighs dramatically
Future generations will vindicate Rumpelton. Mark my words, Reginald. When your precious technical mastery has been forgotten, when your beloved Old Masters gather dust in obsolete museums, Rumpelton's vision will be celebrated as the visual voice of our fractured, digital, democratized age!
THORNBERRY: Future generations will need significant therapy after viewing this dreck. But perhaps that's Rumpelton's true legacy—not as an artist, but as a job creation program for art therapists and ophthalmologists.
MODERATOR: nervously
Gentlemen, I think we've... explored the various perspectives. Shall we—
BOTH, SIMULTANEOUSLY: I'm not finished!
The debate continues, escalating into increasingly baroque insults and impenetrable theoretical frameworks, until security finally escorts both men from the premises, still arguing passionately about the nature of noses, the semiotics of MS Paint, and whether "sub-sublimity" is even a real word.
Ralph Rumpelton, when reached for comment, said he "just thought they looked neat" and returned to working on his next piece: a portrait of Prince using only the circle tool.
THORNBERRY, three bottles deep into a 1982 Château Margaux
THORNBERRY: squinting at the paintings, swaying slightly
You know what, Horace... Horace, my dear fellow... hiccups ...I may have been... perhaps a touch... harsh.
Look at that nose on Dylan. LOOK AT IT. It's... it's bold. It's a statement. It says "I am a nose, dammit, and I refuse to apologize!" The man—Rumpel-thing, Rumple-stiltskin, whatever—he gets it. Noses SHOULD be ski slopes! Why have we been drawing them small all these centuries? COWARDICE, that's why!
staggers closer to the paintings
And that blue! That GLORIOUS blue! It's not insipid—it's... it's... waves hand dramatically ...it's the color of FREEDOM, Horace! The color of SKY! Of POSSIBILITY! Of... of... my swimming pool!
PLIMWELL: watching with barely concealed glee
Go on, Reginald...
THORNBERRY: getting emotional
The texture! God, the TEXTURE! Each little dot is like... like a snowflake of genius! Or... or dandruff of brilliance! I was WRONG, Horace! clutches Plimwell's shoulder
Rumpelton isn't just an artist—he's a PROPHET! A visionary! This Dylan... this Harrison... they're not portraits, they're PRAYERS! Visual HYMNS!
collapses into chair
I must buy them. I must own them. They'll hang next to my mirrors... my beautiful, honest mirrors...
passes out
PLIMWELL: quietly to moderator
I'll be quoting that in my next monograph.





