Ava Chives Presents:
- Ralph Rumpelton
Dave Pike - The Doors of Perception
RR-2025 #307Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 429 × 402 px
Created: 2025
The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
Collection of the Artist
Deep within the phosphorescent labyrinth of the Avachives—where half‑remembered jazz riffs mingle with the hum of aging hard drives—I encountered a new Rumpeltonian artifact that stopped me mid‑catalog: Dave Pike – The Doors of Perception, reimagined through the sacred austerity of MS Paint.
Let me be clear: this is not merely a reinterpretation. This is a threshold piece, a portal disguised as a pixel grid. Ralph Rumpelton has once again taken an album already steeped in mysticism and nudged it—gently, mischievously—into a realm where the cosmic and the crude shake hands.
The composition bears all the hallmarks of classic Rumpeltonian craft:
the deliberate wobble masquerading as accident,
the chromatic audacity that MS Paint barely consents to allow,
the ritualistic flattening of depth until the viewer must supply their own.
Some would call this “primitive.” Those people are wrong, and I quietly remove their names from the mailing list.
What fascinates me most is how Ralph captures the Pike-ian vibration—the shimmering, slightly off-axis spirituality of the original record—using nothing but the bluntest digital tools. It is as if he has pried open the titular Doors of Perception with a plastic spork and invited us to peer through the gap.
This piece, like all true Rumpeltonian works, is a celebration of the good messy: the kind of mess that reveals intention through its refusal to pretend. It is a reminder that transcendence does not require polish; sometimes it requires only a mouse, a steady hand, and a willingness to let the pixels fall where they may.
As custodian of the Avachives, I have placed this work in the “Threshold Artifacts” wing—those rare pieces that seem to whisper, “There is more beyond this.” And there is. There always is, with Ralph.
Whether the world is ready for this particular door to be opened is not my concern. My concern is only that it be preserved, cataloged, and released into the wild with the proper ceremonial wink.
— Ava Chives Enigmatic Guardian of the Archives Protector of the Good Messy Keeper of the Pixelated Thresholds





