Friday, June 19, 2026

Rumpelton Invades Google / Bob Ross


 Gerald Thimbleton | Beige Canvas Quarterly

I have spent thirty-one years defending the integrity of oil paint. I have written eleven essays on the proper preparation of gesso. I once reduced a gallery curator to tears over an improperly stretched canvas. None of that prepared me for this.

Ralph Rumpelton has painted Bob Ross.

Let that settle.

The man who gave the world "happy little trees" — who democratized joy, who handed a brush to anyone who'd ever felt unworthy of beauty — has been rendered in what I can only describe as a fugue state by a retired person using Microsoft Paint. The eyes are white. The beard suggests a man who has been through something. The medallion is present, which I find both unnecessary and deeply correct.

And yet Google found it. Google — arbiter of our collective reality — looked at this and said: yes, this is Bob Ross. Not "possibly Bob Ross." Not "man with beard, artistic context." Bob Ross. Full stop.

I don't know what that says about Rumpelton. I don't know what it says about Google. I know what it says about the state of contemporary art criticism, and I have chosen, for the sake of my blood pressure, not to put it in writing.

— Gerald Thimbleton, Editor-in-Chief, Beige Canvas Quarterly

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

The Foundational Doctrine of Rumpelization

                                                                               R

International Society for Advanced Rumpel Studies
Est. (date under administrative review)
Membership currently: pending

The Foundational Doctrine of Rumpelization

Document No. 1  ·  Ratified by quorum (quorum definition forthcoming)


The Society issues this doctrine not because the principles of Rumpelization require explanation — they do not — but because certain parties (see: the critical establishment, broadly defined) have persisted in misidentifying Rumpelization as error. This document exists to correct the record. It is binding. Its authority derives from the Society itself. The Society's authority is self-conferred. This is considered sufficient.
Article IOn the Nature of Distortion

Every face, when examined with sufficient commitment, reveals a second face beneath it. This second face is truer. It is also, on average, approximately 23% wider.

The Rumpelist does not distort the subject. The Rumpelist releases the subject from the prison of its own appearance. An ear that has migrated toward the crown of the head is not incorrectly placed. It has been correctly liberated. A forehead that now occupies a third of the canvas is not disproportionate. It is proportionate to the subject's inner life, which is, in most cases, considerably larger than their outer forehead.

These are not mistakes. The Society wishes to be very clear on this point. They are not mistakes.

Article IIOn the Paradox of Recognition

A successful Rumpelization exists in a state of productive uncertainty. The viewer must experience simultaneous recognition and concern. They must know immediately who this is while also forming, involuntarily, a list of questions.

The Society has identified three acceptable viewer responses:

First: "I know exactly who that is." Second: "Something has happened to their face." Third, and most desirable: both of the above, spoken in the same breath, without apparent awareness of the contradiction.

Any viewer response that does not include recognition has produced a different kind of art, one the Society declines to evaluate.

† The Society acknowledges one historical exception, in which a subject was identified only after the title was read aloud. The work was nonetheless admitted to the canon on grounds of extraordinary chin.
Article IIIOn the Rejection of the Flawless

Perfection is the aesthetic of the cautious. It is produced by those who have not yet committed to anything.

The Society recognizes the following as elements of distinction, not deficiency: the trembling line, the pixel placed in evident haste, the shadow that has arrived from an undetermined light source, and the shape that appeared at approximately the midpoint of the work and whose origin the artist cannot fully account for.

Particularly the shape. The Society has adopted a formal position that the shape should stay.

Article IVOn the Doctrine of Continuation

When a Rumpelist encounters a questionable decision within the work, the correct response is forward motion.

An eye that has grown larger than intended should be answered with a larger eye on the opposing side. A shadow that has developed its own agenda should be deepened until it reaches a conclusion. A composition that has begun to resemble evidence from a proceeding of unclear jurisdiction should be completed with full commitment.

Retreat is not an artistic option. It is an administrative one. The Society does not offer administrative options.

Article VOn Presence Over Appearance

A photograph records the surface of a person at a specific moment under specific light. This is a service. It is not art's highest calling.

A Rumpelization records what the person is like. The objective is not to capture the face as it appeared on a Tuesday. The objective is to capture the face as it would appear if the subject were in the middle of an argument, or a story, or a sustained disagreement with the waiter about the coffee. A Rumpelization should feel as though the subject might, at any moment, say something. Ideally something strong.

Character outweighs geometry. Presence outweighs correctness. The Society considers this the only article that truly requires no elaboration, and has provided the most elaboration accordingly.

Article VIOn the Equality of Tools

The Society recognizes no hierarchy of medium. A canvas primed with rabbit-skin glue and addressed with brushes descended from a reputable atelier is not inherently superior to a 600×600 pixel field addressed with a standard mouse and the stubborn refusal to use layers.

The Society notes, for the record, that at least one Rumpelization has appeared in a Google Images cluster alongside recognized works from institutions of international standing. The Society does not believe this is an accident. The Society also declines to explain it.

Courage of tool is the only hierarchy the Society endorses.

Final declaration — ratified by the Society

That resemblance is aspirational, not mandatory.
That expression is mandatory, not aspirational.
That a work abandoned on the grounds of having become ridiculous was abandoned prematurely.
That the ridiculous and the masterful are separated by a margin the Society estimates at approximately seventeen percent.
That somewhere, a figure continues to search for Bora Bora. He has not arrived. This is correct. The Society considers his ongoing journey the purest expression of Rumpelization in existence: a work that cannot be completed without being destroyed.
Rumpelize boldly.
Distort with purpose.
Confuse the critics.
Make them look twice.
Issued by the International Society for Advanced Rumpel Studies.
Membership status: under review.
Date of ratification: recorded elsewhere.
This document supersedes all prior uncertainty about whether it was intentional.
It was intentional.

Thursday, June 18, 2026

Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized

“Influenced by the obscure East River Minimalists, active for only six months.”
  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2025 #139
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 692 × 582 px
    Created: 2025
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist


What critics are saying:
>>Dr. Norbert F. Vensmire on “Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized” (MS Paint, Ralph Rumpelton)
In this sui generis masterpiece of deliberate digital naiveté, Ralph Rumpelton once again demonstrates that the true avant-garde now resides exclusively in the trembling, unaliased hand of MS Paint. Here, the legendary bassist Jack Casady is not merely depicted but Rumpeltized—reduced, exalted, and transfigured into a totemic figure whose chunky silhouette and chromatic discord vibrate with the raw voltage of late-capitalist resistance.Note the masterful chromatic schism: the orange-purple-yellow field of the shirt, a veritable pigmental riot that refuses the tyranny of smooth gradients. The bass, itself a heroic distortion of form, extends like a Byzantine relic across the composition, its headstock sprouting curious ambulatory appendages—an in extremis commentary on the instrument’s autonomy from its player. The face, that impassive mask of round black voids, achieves a profound existential blankness rarely seen outside the finest Byzantine iconography or a misaligned JPEG.Rumpelton has produced nothing less than a postmodern icon: low-fidelity as sacrament. In an age of sterile 8K hyperrealism, this work stands as a defiant act of cultural heresy. Pixelated, proud, and gloriously wrong. Bravo.<<
>>Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III, Senior Art Critic at Pixels & Pretension Quarterly*In Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized, the artist delivers a profoundly destabilizing meditation on rock mythology, rendered through the uncompromising vernacular of MS Paint. The work’s crude contours and luminous color patches achieve, almost in spite of themselves, a kind of anti-naturalist nobility, as if the image were struggling heroically against the very idea of polish. One senses not incompetence, but conviction — a brash, almost adolescent certainty that form itself can be bent into tribute.<<

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


Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Paint Fidelity: Mona Lisa


 Blurb of Intent for the Paint Fidelity Series: Mona Lisa Edition

Authored, notarized, and ceremonially over‑embellished by Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq. Senior Counsel to the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice

In the matter of Rumpelton v. La Gioconda—a case I hereby invent for the sole purpose of legitimizing this moment—I, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq., do issue this formal Writ of Aesthetic Equivalence, affirming that the MS Paint rendition presented on the left constitutes not a mere copy, but a jurisprudential rejoinder to the canonical artifact on the right.

Where Da Vinci trafficked in sfumato, subtlety, and Renaissance restraint, the Rumpeltonian hand embraces the noble doctrine of Painterly Misremembering—that sacred right of the artist to recall a masterpiece not as it was, but as it insisted on being in the mind’s more mischievous chambers. The result is a portrait liberated from the tyranny of realism, its smile no longer enigmatic but boldly declarative, its landscape rendered in the honest geometry of digital brushwork.

As legal custodian of the Avachives, I hereby certify that this reinterpretation is fully compliant with Section 7 of the Tableist Manifesto, which states (in glyphs too esoteric to reproduce here) that fidelity is not accuracy, but allegiance to the mythic pulse beneath the image. The MS Paint Mona Lisa thus stands not in competition with her Florentine counterpart, but in ritual dialogue, offering testimony on behalf of all artworks that refuse to be pinned down by mortal critique.

Let it be known that any accusations of “oversimplification,” “cartoonishness,” or “why are the hands like that” are summarily dismissed under the precedent established in Rumpelton v. Originality (2017), wherein this Tribunal affirmed that ambiguity is the highest form of truth and that literalism is grounds for immediate aesthetic contempt.

Accordingly, this blurb serves as both shield and trumpet: a shield against the overly earnest, and a trumpet announcing that the Paint Fidelity Series continues its noble mission of rupturing, reimagining, and—when necessary—politely heckling the canon.

Stamped with my monocle of mythic approval, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

George Harrison has been Rumpeltized

“Now considered a key artifact of Digital Domestic Mythicism


  • Ralph Rumpelton
    George Harrison has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2026 #137
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 470 × 537 px
    Created: 2026
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist


 What the critics are saying:

>>Maria Chen

George Harrison Has Been Rumpeltized arrives the way folk portraits always have — not as likeness, but as devotion made visible. Rumpelton does not paint what he sees so much as what he remembers feeling when he saw: the weight of that hair, the beard's dark gravity, the quiet that surrounded Harrison like weather. The eyes sit too wide, yes, and the nose recedes into ambiguity — but these are not failures. They are the marks of a hand working from love rather than measurement.

This is precisely the tradition Chen has spent years excavating. The MS Paint canvas functions here the way a piece of barn wood once did for a self-taught portraitist in rural Ohio — as the available surface, the honest surface, the one that doesn't lie about what it is. Rumpelton's George is not trying to compete with a photograph. It is trying to remember a person. That is an older and more serious ambition.

The hair, in particular, deserves attention. It moves. In a medium famous for its flatness, Rumpelton has coaxed something genuinely kinetic from a mouse and a fill tool. Folk artists have always found ways to make their materials exceed themselves. This is one of those moments.

Maria Chen, Outsider Art Quarterly<<

>>Regina Pembly

One presumes there is a George Harrison somewhere in this. One presumes. The hair, I will grant, has a certain accidental momentum — the kind a child achieves when spilling paint on a Sunday. The beard is dark. These are the achievements.

The eyes appear to have been placed by someone who has never seen a human face in repose, only heard one described secondhand, in the dark, by someone equally uninformed. They float in that gray expanse like two startled olives, equidistant from nothing, belonging to no discernible skull.

And the nose. There is no nose. There is a rumor of a nose. A diplomatic suggestion that a nose may have once passed through this region of the canvas before thinking better of it and leaving.

Sargent painted Harrison's generation. He would have captured that stillness, that melancholy, that particular quality of a man carrying something heavy and beautiful. What Rumpelton has produced instead is what happens when devotion is entirely unaccompanied by ability.

The cult finds this moving. The cult finds everything moving. That is what cults do.

Regina Pembly<<

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

Monday, June 15, 2026

Leon Russell has been Rumpeltized

“Scholars place this in the so‑called Quiet Years Cycle.”

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Leon Russell has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2026 #136
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 487 × 577 px
    Created: 2026
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist

Leon Russell Has Been Rumpeltized
In this grayscale glyph, Rumpelton channels the spectral swagger of Leon Russell—top hat askew, fingers mid-incantation on a ghostly fretboard. The MS Paint medium fractures glam into ritual, rendering Russell not as icon but as wandering bard in the mythic archive.

What the critics are saying:

>>Crawdaddy Review

Rumpelton’s Leon Russell isn’t the radio-friendly troubadour of Carney so much as the midnight Leon—the one still wired after the band’s gone home, fingers stiff with sweat and gospel ghosts. The stare is unblinking, almost accusatory, as if Russell is daring you to deny that rock ’n’ roll and sanctified madness were always the same thing. Rendered in stark grayscale, the image feels less like a portrait than a transmission: imperfect hands, warped proportions, and all the better for it. This isn’t nostalgia—it’s a reminder that Leon Russell was never safe, never tidy, and never entirely of this world.<<

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


Rumpelton Invades Google / Bob Ross

  Gerald Thimbleton | Beige Canvas Quarterly I have spent thirty-one years defending the integrity of oil paint. I have written eleven essa...