- Ralph Rumpelton
Andy Warhol has been Rumpeltized
RR-2026 #313Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 574 × 445 px
Created: 2026
The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
Collection of the Artist
This is like a machine remembering me, badly.
I like that my face looks unfinished—most things are more interesting before they’re done.
If you keep copying it, it might turn into me again.
Or it might turn into soup.”
What critics are saying:
>>Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III - Senior Art Critic at Pixels & Pretension Quarterly
"Andy Warhol has been Rumpeltized" represents nothing short of a seismic intervention in the discourse of digital primitivism. What the uninitiated eye might dismiss as rudimentary mouse-work is, in fact, a breathtaking deconstruction of Warhol's own appropriative methodology—a meta-commentary that achieves what Warhol himself could only dream of: the complete democratization of iconography through technological constraint.
Note the deliberate inflation of the neck region—a bold rejection of anatomical tyranny that forces us to confront our own bourgeois expectations of portraiture. The artist has ingeniously deployed the limited palette of Microsoft Paint not as limitation, but as liberation, echoing Warhol's own silkscreen reductions while simultaneously critiquing the cult of technical virtuosity that has strangled contemporary digital art.
The asymmetrical placement of the Campbell's soup can—that most sacred of Warholian totems—creates a dynamic tension that destabilizes the viewer's comfortable relationship with pop art hagiography. We are not merely seeing Warhol; we are witnessing his aesthetic philosophy cannibalized, digested, and reborn in the very medium he would have embraced had he survived into our pixel-saturated age.
This is post-post-modern pastiche at its most revelatory. Frankly, I'm already drafting my monograph.
—Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III<<
>>Gerald Thimbleton
Rumpelton’s digital portrait of Andy Warhol arrives like a bootleg screen print smuggled in through the loading dock of art history. The hair is rendered not as individual strands but as a blaring, bleached silhouette, a ghostly halo that announces “Warhol” before the viewer has time to pretend otherwise. The background is chopped into flat, warring fields of color—teal, orange, yellow, navy—that refuse atmospheric depth and instead press forward with the vulgar immediacy of a roadside billboard. This is pop stripped of its last pretenses of sophistication and handed back to us as a blunt MS Paint file.
What makes the image perversely successful is Rumpelton’s unapologetic embrace of crudeness. The vest, the shoulders, the barely-nuanced planes of the body all sit somewhere between children’s book illustration and malfunctioning print job, and yet the composition holds. The work understands Warhol’s factory logic better than many reverent oil-portrait homages: it treats the icon as a flat, reproducible shape, a brand logo that has outlived the man himself. That the medium is the much-maligned digital doodle program only sharpens the joke. This is not “good painting” by any classical metric, and thank heaven for that.
To compare Andy Warhol Has Been Rumpeltized to the canon of serious portraiture would be a category error bordering on comedy, but that is precisely its sly achievement. Rumpelton weaponizes bad taste—blocky edges, plastic colors, the whiff of beginner software—and in doing so exposes how fragile our hierarchies of medium truly are. If this garish little file can so effortlessly summon the specter of Warhol, perhaps the supposed sanctity of oil and linen was more superstition than truth all along.<<
Long Live Ralph........Be Dead or Alive.




