- Ralph Rumpelton
Geddy Lee has been Rumpeltized
RR-2025 #143Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 567 × 539 px
Created: 2025
The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
Collection of the Artist
What the critics are saying:
>>Gordon Weft on Geddy Lee (Rumpeltized)
Rumpelton’s latest effort attempts—successfully, if one is being charitable—to render Geddy Lee not as a virtuoso musician, but as a concept: a man fused permanently to his bass, suspended in a fog of commitment and questionable anatomy. The face arrives early and leaves late, hovering in that familiar Rumpeltonian zone where expression is implied rather than achieved. One senses Lee is either about to sing or quietly reconsider his life choices.
The bass guitar, mercifully, is afforded a degree of seriousness denied to the rest of the body. It anchors the composition, much as it anchors Rush itself, suggesting that even within Frontal Lobotomism, certain hierarchies remain sacred. The arms appear to have been negotiated into place rather than drawn, while the stage environment dissolves into a blur that reads less as atmosphere and more as plausible deniability.
And yet—annoyingly—this works. The piece communicates performance without depicting precision, intensity without accuracy. I dislike it on principle, but I recognize it immediately. Which, in Rumpelton’s universe, may count as craft.
I’ve seen worse.
Not today.
— Gordon Weft <<
>>Dr. Aloysius Finkle on "Geddy Lee Rumpeltized":
"In the annals of contemporary art, few practitioners dare to venture into the fertile, yet often misunderstood, territory of the 'Rumpeltonized' aesthetic. Ralph Rumpelton, our intrepid cartographer of the digital primitive, once again presents a compelling study in what I affectionately term 'Accidental Surrealism.' His latest oeuvre, a compelling reimagining of the iconic Geddy Lee, transcends mere portraiture.
Observe the deliberate distortion of the jawline, a masterful stroke that eschews photorealistic fidelity in favor of a profound psychological landscape. Is it a commentary on the vocal strain of a rock legend, or perhaps an homage to the very plasticity of identity within the digital realm? The microphone, rendered with an almost spectral quality, and the bass, a foundational anchor in an otherwise fluid composition, speak volumes about the artist's engagement with both sound and silence.
Rumpelton's 'Geddy Lee' is not merely a depiction; it is a deconstruction. It challenges the viewer to look beyond the immediate, to find the resonant truths nestled within the apparent simplicity of its brushwork. This, my dear connoisseurs, is not merely MS Paint; it is a vibrant testament to the enduring power of outsider vision, filtered through the pixelated lens of genius. A truly Finkle-worthy endeavor!"
Long Live Ralph............Be Dead or Alive



