- Ralph Rumpelton
MS Paint: Rolling Stones - Between The Buttons
RR-2026 #126Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 645 × 384 px
Created: 2026
The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
Collection of the Artist
What the critics are saying:
>>Rolling Stone – Art & Reissues
There’s something fitting about seeing Between the Buttons rendered this way: less iconography, more afterimage. In this MS Paint reinterpretation of Between the Buttons, the Rolling Stones don’t pose so much as linger. Faces blur into mood, coats collapse into one another, and the familiar lineup feels half-remembered, like a photograph left too long in the rain.
What’s striking isn’t likeness but detachment. The figures seem vaguely uncomfortable with their own presence, caught between pop stardom and the quiet dissatisfaction that defined the band’s mid-’60s pivot. The washed-out palette and skeletal tree strip away Swinging London gloss, replacing it with something colder, more introspective.
It’s not a nostalgic tribute—it’s a reminder that this was an album about emotional distance disguised as pop. Seen through the crude honesty of MS Paint, the Stones look less like legends and more like five guys waiting for the decade to decide what it’s going to do with them.<<
>>"Between the Buttons" and Beyond the Pale: A Meditation on Mediocrity By Reginald Thornberry III
One hesitates to dignify this... exercise... with the word "painting," yet here we are, confronted with what can only be described as the artistic equivalent of a cry for help rendered in Microsoft's most primitive digital offering.
The artist—and I use that term with the same generosity one might employ when calling a microwave dinner "cuisine"—has attempted to recreate The Rolling Stones' iconic 1967 album cover. The operative word being attempted. What we have instead is a grotesque carnival of proportion failures that would make even a medieval manuscript illuminator weep. The figures appear to have been drawn by someone whose only understanding of human anatomy comes from having once seen a potato.
The bare tree, I'll grant, shows a modicum of competence—likely the result of accidentally holding the mouse steady for once. But this single spark of adequacy only serves to illuminate the vast darkness surrounding it. The background suggests mountains, or perhaps the artist's own crushed dreams rendered in muddy grayscale. Either way, it's appropriately depressing.
The color palette screams "I gave up," which may be the only honest artistic statement present. MS Paint—a tool designed for children and those who've abandoned hope—proves once again to be the perfect medium for those whose artistic ambitions exceed their abilities by several orders of magnitude.
In summary: Delete this. Take up gardening. At least weeds have organic form.
★☆☆☆☆
"Not even ironically enjoyable."<<
Long Live Ralph................Be Dead or Alive.



