Friday, July 3, 2026

Rumpelton Invades Google - Bill Wyman


 Rumpelton Invades Google: Bill Wyman Reviewed by Dale of the Brook, Unseeded Mystic, Critic of Cleansing, Racketless Oracle

I approached this triptych the only way a brook-born critic can: by wading waist‑deep into the current and whispering “Bill Wyman” to the minnows. They scattered, which is always a good omen.

Your MS Paint Wyman—the leftmost apparition—arrives already half‑soaked, a cartoonish specter whose outlines seem to have been rinsed in a storm drain. It rejects symmetry, embraces dampness, and carries the faint mildew of memory that only true Rumpeltonian works exhale. When I performed the Soap Test, the piece lathered immediately. Rare.

The two photographic Wymans to the right, dredged from the great digital river known as Google, act as dry witnesses. They stand there, crisp and factual, unaware that the Rumpeltonized version beside them is slowly baptizing their pixels. Together, the collage becomes a cleansing ritual: the official Wyman, the historical Wyman, and the freshly rinsed Wyman you birthed in Paint.

I rate this soul‑rinser four suds out of five. It exfoliates my regrets. It dampens my certainties. It is, in every meaningful way, wet art.

Long Live Ralph.........Be Dead or Alive

Thursday, July 2, 2026

🜂 THE RUMPELTON CULT

 

THE RUMPELTON CULT

A field guide for concerned citizens, art historians, and anyone who has accidentally clicked r/Rumpelton_Institute.

Core Belief

The Rumpelton Cult believes that Ralph Rumpelton’s MS Paint works are not merely art, but evidence of a cosmic misalignment — a crack in the visual order of the universe. Where others see “a guy with a long head and tiny pilgrim body,” they see prophetic distortion.

They call this distortion The Bend.

Founding Myth

According to cult lore, Rumpelton did not “begin drawing” one afternoon. He received the ability after:

  • staring too long at a malfunctioning Epson printer

  • witnessing a “holy glitch”

  • and hearing a voice whisper: “Proportion is a prison.”

This moment is commemorated annually as The Great Misclick.

Sacred Texts

The cult maintains three primary scriptures:

  • The Book of Compression — explains why heads should be long and bodies should be small

  • The Scroll of Unnecessary Lines — a treatise on adding details that do not help

  • The Manifesto of Mild Indifference — Rumpelton’s famous philosophy: “I’m just drawing stuff.”

Rituals

Members gather in small rooms lit only by the glow of outdated monitors. Rituals include:

  • The Opening of MS Paint — performed with solemnity

  • The Sacred Undo — used to erase doubt

  • The Pilgrim Stretch — a meditative exercise where followers elongate their own faces in selfies

Advanced members practice Deep Warping, a trance state achieved by zooming in to 800% and contemplating pixel clusters.

Hierarchy

The cult is structured around artistic dysfunction:

  • The High Distorter — interprets new Rumpelton works

  • The Council of Skew — debates whether a crooked line is intentional

  • The Order of the Unblended Colors — novices who have not yet mastered shading avoidance

Symbols

The cult’s primary sigil is The Long Head, often drawn poorly and inconsistently, which is considered a sign of devotion.

Another symbol is The Tiny Pilgrim Body, representing humility, fragility, and the inability to draw torsos.

Controversies

The Rumpelton Cult has been accused of:

  • spreading “anti‑anatomy propaganda”

  • encouraging “reckless proportioning”

  • recruiting new members through cryptic Reddit posts like: “Have you seen The Bend today?”

They deny all allegations, usually with the phrase: “We’re just looking at weird stuff.”

Public Perception

Art critics are divided:

  • Some call the cult a threat to classical portraiture

  • Others call it a refreshing rejection of visual tyranny

  • Most simply say: “Why is this everywhere.”

MS Paint: Mingus - "Mingus, Mingus, Mingus, Mingus" / Rumpelton

“First identified by art historian Marjorie Kline in her 2022 monograph.”


  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Mingus - "Mingus, Mingus, Mingus, Mingus"
    RR-2026 #149
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 558 × 582 px
    Created: 2026
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist


 What the critics are saying:

>>Jazz Perspectives (Vienna)

This MS Paint work does not depict Charles Mingus so much as submit him to reduction. Stripped of anecdote, virtuosity, and American myth, the figure is rendered as a blunt accumulation of color, density, and inward pressure. One senses not the bassist as personality, but as problem.

The saturated ochres and yellows reject photographic fidelity in favor of something more architectural, almost geological. The face appears eroded rather than modeled, as if shaped by time, temperament, and repetition. The insistent hand-lettering of MINGUS—stacked, uneven, refusing hierarchy—suggests obsession rather than homage, recalling the compulsive notations of rehearsal rooms rather than the clarity of liner notes.

There is an intentional awkwardness here, a resistance to elegance that mirrors Mingus’s own antagonism toward refinement for its own sake. The limitations of the medium are neither disguised nor celebrated; they are accepted with a certain severity. What remains is an image that behaves less like a portrait and more like a sustained tone—abrasive, unresolved, and quietly demanding.<<

>>Gerald Thimbleton

Charles Mingus, as seen through the jaundiced filter of MS Paint, is not so much portrayed here as declared. The head is a hulking ochre monolith, shaved of nuance and chiaroscuro, thrust forward like a bass note that refuses to resolve. The profile teeters between caricature and icon, but that uncertainty is precisely where this picture finds its charge: it is Mingus as remembered, not Mingus as rendered.

The yellow field, bordering on radioactive, makes no apologies. It steamrolls over notions of tasteful palette, insisting instead on a single, insistent emotional temperature: hot, congested, and faintly toxic, like a club with no ventilation at 2 a.m. The beard and hair, hacked out in blunt digital strokes, possess more conviction than anatomical accuracy; their job is not to convince the eye, but to anchor the head in a sort of improvised geometry. That they largely succeed is a testament to the artist’s instinct for silhouette, if not for bone structure.

Most telling is the stuttering stack of “MINGUS” on the left—a jittery column of handwriting that looks less like typography and more like someone nervously repeating a name to themselves so as not to forget it. It undercuts the monumentality of the head with a human stammer, a reminder that reverence here is home‑made and a bit frail. The tiny, almost apologetic “impulse” circle in the corner reads as a citation the artist felt obliged to include, yet could not be bothered to fetishize with precision. This is not a designer’s homage to a historic label; it is a fan’s rough footnote.

One could complain about the flattening of the features, the cramped eye, the unresolved hand drifting at the bottom edge. But to do so would be to miss the larger point: this is not a painting arguing for admission to the museum of “proper” portraiture. It is a digital folk icon, blunt, earnest, and faintly abrasive, closer in spirit to a bootleg gig poster than to polished album art. If Mingus believed in disciplined anarchy, this picture leans decisively toward the latter—but it does so with enough brute-force clarity that one can’t dismiss it as mere doodling. It is clumsy, yes—but it is clumsy with intent, which is more than can be said for much smoother work.<<

                             Long Live Ralph.........Be Dead or Alive


Paint Fidelity: Jeffrey Pine - Adams / Rumpelton



Blurb for the Paint Fidelity Series, as authored by Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.

Authored by Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq., Senior Counsel to the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice

By decree of the Tribunal and under the ceremonial auspices of the Avachival Charter of Painterly Equivalence, I hereby submit this formal blurb for the Jeffery Pine Fidelity Pair, in which Rumpelton’s MS Paint rendering stands in sanctioned dialogue with the original photograph by Ansel Adams, whose work remains the gold standard of evidentiary landscape documentation.

In this diptych, Adams’ photograph serves as the Primary Witness, offering what the Tribunal recognizes as Objective Arboreal Truth: the Jeffery Pine as captured through the lens of a man who treated light itself as sworn testimony. Yet factual sovereignty, while admirable, is never the final word in matters of interpretive justice.

Opposite this canonical image stands Rumpelton’s MS Paint reinterpretation—an act of Fidelity-with-Intent, wherein each pixel constitutes a notarized declaration of mythic remembrance. The simplified contours, the deliberate ruptures, the painterly misremembering: all fall squarely within the protections established in Rumpelton v. Originality (2017), the landmark case in which this Tribunal affirmed that artistic deviation may, under proper ritual conditions, supersede literal accuracy.

Together, Adams and Rumpelton form a legally binding dyad: the Fidelity Pair, in which the photograph asserts its evidentiary dominion while the MS Paint counterpart asserts its interpretive rights under the Blurbs of Intent. The viewer is invited to consider both panels as co-equal testimonies—one corporeal, one mythic—each indispensable to the jurisprudence of aesthetic truth.

This exhibit has been granted provisional approval under Article VII of the Avachival Statutes and is hereby shielded from all allegations of Excessive Literalism, Interpretive Trespass, or Unauthorized Realism.

Filed, stamped, and monocle-certified, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq. Senior Counsel to the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

MS Paint: "No Applause" / Ralph Rumpelton

The musician plays to the sound of no applause.

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    "No Applause"
    RR-2025 #148
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 567 × 578 px
    Created: 2025
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist

What the critics are saying:

>>Professor Lionel Greaves

North Atlantic School of Modern Reproduction Studies

In No Applause, Rumpelton unconsciously resurrects what I have elsewhere termed Post-Acoustic Melancholism, a short-lived subcurrent of late 1970s Neo-Introversionism (often confused with—but legally distinct from—Regional Quietism). The elongated head, flattened affect, and refusal of ocular engagement recall the lesser-known Kraków Silence Painters of 1983, though rendered here through the radically democratic interface of MS Paint rather than linen or tempera.

The guitar, notably over-articulated in its strings yet under-articulated in its corporeal mass, functions not as an instrument but as a conceptual interruption—a diagram of music rather than music itself. This imbalance mirrors the subject’s existential condition: precision without reward, effort without audience. Hence the title, which the artist almost certainly arrived at instinctively, though it aligns uncannily with Greaves’ own 1994 essay Clapping and Its Absence in Peripheral Image Cultures.

The hands—often misread by casual viewers as “unfinished”—should instead be understood as a deliberate invocation of Manual Uncertainty, a hallmark of the defunct Flemish-Digital Synthesis movement (1999–2001). Here, the hands do not play the guitar; they merely remember having played.

Ultimately, No Applause is not about performance, nor even about music. It is about rehearsal as a permanent state of being—art made in anticipation of a response that will never arrive, and therefore never disappoint.<<

>>Eunice Gribble on “No Applause”

From the Avachives: Parallel Comparative Exhibition No. 27

The canonical source—whatever it may be, and I assure you I have not bothered to locate it—surely depicts a musician performing for an audience. Rumpelton’s MS Paint reinterpretation, by contrast, performs for no one. It is a portrait of artistic refusal, rendered in grayscale austerity and framed by a void that would make even the Museum of Format Integrity’s lighting committee weep.

The figure sits suspended in black, illuminated only by the stark economy of Ralph’s pixel decisions. The guitar is present, yes, but stripped of its cultural baggage. There is no stage, no crowd, no applause. Only the act itself. The hands hover in that familiar Rumpeltized tension—half‑gesture, half‑glyph—suggesting technique without ever capitulating to realism.

This is not a musician. This is a ritual practitioner.

The canonical image (which I have chosen not to view, on principle) would no doubt attempt to contextualize the performer. Rumpelton rejects context entirely. He offers instead a silhouette of concentration, a study in digital sincerity, a refusal to flatter either the subject or the viewer.

The juxtaposition—canonical presence versus Rumpeltized absence—meets the Gribble Standard™ for Parallel Comparative Exhibition. It interrogates aesthetic memory. It exposes the fragility of applause as a cultural construct. It reminds us that art, at its most unflinching, does not require witnesses.

I detect no compression artifacts. I do, however, detect intention.

Expect commentary. Expect judgment. Expect pearls.

Eunice Gribble
Former Deputy Chair, Museum of Format Integrity (defunct)<<

                      Long Live Ralph........Be Dead or Alive

Cast List for Rumpelton: The Movie

 Ralph Rumpelton — played by John C. Reilly

  • quiet, thoughtful weirdness

  • gentle humor

  • obsessive creative energy

  • the “guy at a computer at 2 AM” vibe

  • the emotional sincerity beneath the absurdity

He’d play you as a man who paints because he has to — not for fame, not for likes, but because the universe keeps handing him MS Paint visions.

Desmond Fitch — played by Walton Goggins

  • manic devotion

  • bizarre seriousness

  • cult‑leader enthusiasm

  • meticulous, flood‑adjuster precision

  • ability to praise you in a way that feels both flattering and deeply concerning

He’d deliver Fitch’s lines like they’re scripture.

Bleakridge — played by Hugh Laurie

Marjorie Snint — played by Catherine O’Hara

Barrister Clive Thistlebaum — played by Stephen Fry

The Narrator — played by Werner Herzog


Plot Outline — Rumpelton

 A film about obsession, creation, and the strange beauty of doing something for no reason except that you must.

ACT I — The Ordinary Man With the Unordinary Compulsion

Somewhere Night-shift worker. Fantasy sports tab always open. A man who lives alone in a co‑op and doesn’t think of himself as an artist.

One night, after a long shift, he opens MS Paint “just to mess around.” Something happens. A strange, crooked face appears. It’s not good — but it’s alive.

He posts it online. No likes. No comments. But he feels something shift.

He keeps painting.

The film shows the early pieces — awkward, funny, accidental — and the moment he realizes he’s not just doodling. He’s building something.

ACT II — The Birth of the Rumpelton Myth

Ralph begins creating more paintings. Dozens. Then hundreds.

He invents a signature: Ralph Rumpelton — a name that feels bigger than him, stranger, mythic.

Then the lore begins.

He creates:

  • Desmond Fitch, the obsessive critic

  • The Rumpeltonian Quarterly

  • Bleakridge, the cruel academic rival

  • Barrister Thistlebaum, the pompous legal interpreter of his art

  • Marjorie Snint, the archivist of lost MS Paint civilizations

The film shows him typing these characters into existence at 2 AM, laughing to himself, then suddenly becoming serious — because the lore feels real.

Meanwhile, his art gets 5 likes. Bots follow him. He shrugs and keeps going.

This is where the movie becomes funny, surreal, and strangely moving.

ACT III — The Quiet Cult Begins

A blogger stumbles on his work. A Discord server shares a screenshot. Someone writes a confused but fascinated post about “this MS Paint guy who invented his own art movement.”

Ralph doesn’t notice at first. He’s too busy painting.

But slowly, the world starts peeking in.

Not fame. Not money. Just curiosity.

People begin reading Fitch’s reviews as if Fitch is real. Someone quotes Bleakridge in an argument. A small online community forms around the myth.

Ralph is still at his computer, still painting, still checking fantasy sports.

The film shows the contrast:

  • the tiny ripples he’s creating online

  • the quiet, ordinary life he’s living offline

It’s funny. It’s touching. It’s a portrait of a man who accidentally built a universe.

ACT IV — The Acceptance

Ralph realizes something: He may never be famous. He may never be understood. But he has created something that exists — something that will outlast him.

He’s not chasing likes. He’s not chasing recognition. He’s chasing the next painting.

The final scene is simple:

Late at night. The glow of the monitor. MS Paint open. A new face forming — strange, crooked, beautiful.

Ralph leans in, focused, calm, content.

Fade out.

Tone of the Film

  • Deadpan humor

  • Quiet emotional depth

  • Surreal touches from the fictional critics

  • A gentle, indie-film melancholy

  • A celebration of obsession, persistence, and weirdness

It’s not a movie about fame. It’s a movie about creation.

Monday, June 29, 2026

The Ten Commandments of Rumpeltonian Cubism (rules)

 

The Ten Commandments of Rumpeltonian Cubism (rules)

  1. Use MS Paint only. No exceptions.
  2. Don’t erase in shame; the “wrong” line is still a line.
  3. Humor is mandatory—if it doesn’t make people laugh, it misses at least half the point.
  4. Perfection is a misunderstanding; “wrong” pixels tell the truth.
  5. Personality over precision (odd human quirks > technically correct anatomy).
  6. All subjects are worthy: saints, rock gods, presidents, pigeons—equal treatment.
  7. The hand must be visible—if you can’t see the maker, it wasn’t made by a human.
  8. Proportions are negotiated, not measured (emotional sizing).

    The Ten Commandments of Rumpeltonian Cubism (rules)

  9. Sign your work: “Ralph Rumpelton was here.”
  10. Publish it—a Rumpeltized painting not posted is a sin against the movement.

Rumpelton Invades Google - Bill Wyman

  Rumpelton Invades Google: Bill Wyman Reviewed by Dale of the Brook, Unseeded Mystic, Critic of Cleansing, Racketless Oracle I approa...