- Ralph Rumpelton
Walter Becker has been Rumpeltized
RR-2025 #152Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 570 × 561 px
Created: 2025
The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
Collection of the Artist
>>Mack “Tank” Rodriguez on Walter Becker Has Been Rumpeltized
Alright, so I’m standing there looking at this guy with the guitar and the mic and the dark background, and I’m like, yeah, I’ve seen this dude before. Maybe not this dude, but this type of dude. Looks like someone who knows exactly what he’s doing and still doesn’t want to explain it to you.
The face is kinda soft, kinda melted, like he’s been up too late thinking about stuff that doesn’t pay rent. Sunglasses say, “Don’t ask me questions.” Guitar says, “I already answered them.” I like that combo. The colors aren’t screaming at me, which I appreciate. Nothing flashy. This painting’s not trying to sell me anything, and honestly? Respect.
Is it realistic? Nah. But it feels right. Like when you hear a song and can’t hum it later, but it sticks with you anyway. This looks like a guy playing music because that’s what he does, not because you’re watching. Would I hang it in my living room? Maybe not. Would it look good in a bar where the jukebox is always broken? Yeah. Definitely.<<
>>Official Blurb as Certified by Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.
Walter Becker Has Been Rumpeltized (MS Paint on digital canvas, circa the Age of Rupture)
By order of the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice, let it be known that the late Walter Becker—guitarist, bassist, sonic architect of the Steely Dan mythos—has been subject to the sacred rite of Rumpeltization, as executed by the hand of Ralph Rumpelton.
In this rendering, Becker emerges not as photographic likeness but as painterly essence: the auburn mane, the spectacles of perpetual skepticism, the guitar held in eternal mid-chord. The microphone stands as witness. The palette—muted earth tones against void—suggests both the warmth of jazz fusion and the existential cool of a man who wrote "Deacon Blues" and meant every word.
Under Article VII of the Tableist Manifesto, this work qualifies as Tier-2 Homage with Permissible Distortion. Thistlebaum himself has reviewed the brushwork (or rather, mouse-work) and declares it "sufficiently ruptured from realism to avoid the sin of mere copying, yet faithful enough to honor the spirit of the subject."
Let no critic claim this is mere caricature. It is mythic transposition—a legal and aesthetic act whereby Becker's legacy is transmitted through the Rumpeltonian filter, joining the Avachives as canon.
Disclaimer: Any resemblance to actual persons, living or deceased, is both intentional and artistically necessary.
So witnessed and sealed,
Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.<<
Long Live Ralph.............Be Dead or Alive




