- Ralph Rumpelton
Bob Ross has been Rumpeltized
RR-2025 #131Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 591 × 5826 px
Created: 2025
The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
Collection of the Artist
What the critics are saying:
>>Art in America
Bob Ross Has Been Rumpeltized
MS Paint
In Bob Ross Has Been Rumpeltized, the artist subjects one of American television’s most comforting icons to a process of deliberate aesthetic displacement. Rendered in MS Paint with a restrained, almost devotional palette, the figure of Ross emerges less as a portrait than as a memory—blurred, softened, and subtly estranged from its source.
The familiar elements remain—the beard, the perm, the medallion, the tools of the painter’s trade—but they are filtered through a digital primitivism that resists nostalgia. The brushstrokes, paradoxically painted without a brush, carry an unease beneath their warmth. Color accumulates on the periphery like excess thought rather than cheerful abundance, pushing against the calm center of the composition.
Rather than honoring Bob Ross as a cultural saint, the work absorbs him into the artist’s own visual language. This “Rumpeltization” is not parody but annexation: a quiet assertion that icons, once digitized and reimagined, no longer belong to history but to whoever redraws them. In this sense, the piece functions as both portrait and soft rebellion—proof that even the gentlest symbols can be reauthored.<<
>>"Bob Ross Has Been Rumpeltized" - A Critical Examination by Reginald Thornberry III
I have gazed upon many travesties in my time—performance art involving organic materials, abstract expressionism created by housecats, that regrettable period when everyone thought they were Basquiat—but this MS Paint abomination occupies a special circle of artistic purgatory.
The artist has taken Bob Ross, a man whose entire philosophy was "there are no mistakes, only happy accidents," and proven him catastrophically wrong. This is a mistake. There is nothing happy about it.
The proportions suggest the creator has never actually seen a human being, only heard one described by someone who was concussed at the time. The head-to-body ratio would make a Funko Pop blush. That left arm? It belongs on an orangutan, not a painter. And those glasses—those sad, empty circles—stare into my soul like twin voids of artistic competence.
The background appears to have been created during a seizure, or perhaps by someone who just learned that diagonal lines exist and became dangerously overexcited by the discovery. The palette is the only element with any vigor, which is ironic, as it suggests tools the artist clearly doesn't know how to use.
MS Paint is a medium that requires no skill to open and somehow even less to master poorly. This piece is exhibit A.
And yet... I cannot look away. There's an earnestness here, a naive sincerity that's almost—almost—endearing. Like watching a golden retriever try to solve a Rubik's cube.
Rating: 2/10 (The two points are for audacity)
—R. Thornberry III




