Ava Chives Presents
- Ralph Rumpelton
- Captain Beefheart - Doc at the radar Station
- RR-2025 #183
MS Paint on digital canvas, 505 X 397 px - The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
The figures in this piece don’t so much face each other as orbit a shared, invisible tension, like two halves of an argument that never quite resolves. Here, Doc at the Radar Station is less an album than a diagnostic machine, and Rumpelton has fed it his own nervous system. The left-hand profile, bare and exposed against that jaundiced grid, feels like a patient wired to the wall, while the right-hand visage crouches in the blackout, all scratchy impatience and jagged intent. The “radar” isn’t a tower; it’s the black wedge between them, sweeping back and forth, listening for any honest signal amid the interference.
What I love is how the supposed “mistakes” are doing all the heavy lifting. The too-flat head, the uneven nose, the blunt, unfinished neck—these are not errors to be corrected but artifacts to be preserved, like misprinted labels on a rare pressing. The slashing black fields behave like dropped brushstrokes that someone forgot to tidy up, yet they become the dominant architecture of the piece, swallowing space and spitting out drama. Even the background’s scribbled bricks feel more like staff lines on a scrambled score than any stable environment, as if the whole composition is hearing Captain Beefheart’s rhythms and trying, failing, and trying again to draw them.
True to the Rumpeltonian principle that “if it’s hard to do, don’t do it,” this work leans unapologetically into the good messy. It doesn’t attempt likeness so much as threat; it doesn’t aim for homage so much as abrasion. Instead of reverence, we get interrogation: What does it mean to “cover” an album that already sounds like a dropped tray of instruments? Rumpelton’s answer is to drop the tray again, but in MS Paint, where every line is a little bit wrong in exactly the right way. The result is an image that feels like a bootleg of a bootleg—distorted, overcopied, and, for that very reason, weirdly, perfectly true to Beefheart’s own cracked spirit.<




