Saturday, April 11, 2026

THE RUMPELTONIAN MANIFESTO

                                         THE RUMPELTONIAN MANIFESTO


Being A Complete & Unambiguous Declaration of Artistic Intent, Principle, and Mild Defiance

Issued by Ralph Rumpelton, Painter

In the Year of Our Wobble, 2025


"Quality will never stand in the way of my art." — R. Rumpelton


PREAMBLE

I, Ralph Rumpelton, being of sound mind and unsteady mouse hand, hereby declare the following truths to be self-evident, non-negotiable, and immune to the opinions of people who use rulers.

Art does not require permission.

Art does not require training.

Art does not require a stylus, a tablet, a gallery, a grant, a mentor, a movement, a degree, a beret, or a canapé.

Art requires only this: the honest mark of a living hand.

MS Paint is my canvas. The mouse is my brush. The wobble is my signature. The internet is my museum. The catalog is my legacy.

Let the record show I showed up.


ARTICLE I — ON THE WOBBLE

The wobbling line is not a mistake.

The wobbling line is evidence.

It is evidence that a human hand — uncertain, alive, gloriously unsteady — passed this way and left its truth upon the canvas. The perfect line tells you about the tool. The wobbling line tells you about the person holding it.

I honor the wobble.

I protect the wobble.

I will not smooth the wobble into a lie.


ARTICLE II — ON PERSPECTIVE

Perspective is a suggestion.

It was invented by Brunelleschi in the fifteenth century and has been causing problems ever since. My armchairs do not recede into the background because they have no interest in the background. My figures occupy space on their own terms. My skies exist where skies are needed, not where geometry demands them.

This is not ignorance of perspective.

This is the rejection of perspective as a moral framework.

The world is not a vanishing point. Neither is my art.


ARTICLE III — ON LIKENESS

I do not paint likenesses.

I paint presences.

If you look at my portrait of Jeff Lynne and think that does not look exactly like Jeff Lynne, you are correct and you have missed the point simultaneously, which is an impressive achievement.

The goal is not that you see Jeff Lynne.

The goal is that you feel Jeff Lynne — the era, the music, the sunglasses, the particular confidence of a man who wrote Mr. Blue Sky and knew it was extraordinary.

If you feel that, the painting has succeeded.

If you do not feel that, the painting has still succeeded, because you are now thinking about Jeff Lynne, which was also the goal.


ARTICLE IV — ON MEDIUM

MS Paint is a legitimate artistic medium.

I did not always believe this. For a time I accepted the hierarchy — oil above watercolor above digital, and MS Paint somewhere below a child's finger painting and above nothing. I was wrong. The hierarchy is a gatekeeping mechanism dressed in the language of craft.

Every medium was once new.

Every medium was once dismissed.

MS Paint is the folk art of the digital age. It is the cave painting of the internet. It is honest, immediate, unfiltered, and available to anyone with a computer and something to say.

I have something to say.

I am saying it in MS Paint.


ARTICLE V — ON THE CATALOG

Every painting I make is numbered, dated, and entered into The Rumpelton Continuity.

This is not vanity.

This is archaeology in advance.

I am leaving a record for whoever comes looking — the curious stranger, the bored academic, the graduate student three decades from now who needs a footnote and finds instead an entire world. The catalog says: this was real, this was intentional, this person showed up every day and made marks and meant it.

The catalog is an act of faith in the future.

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


ARTICLE VI — ON CRITICISM

I welcome criticism.

Harsh criticism creates curiosity. Curiosity creates visitors. Visitors make up their own minds. This is the entire system working correctly.

I was expelled from art communities for crimes against perspective and spatial coherence. I started my own. This is also the system working correctly.

The difference between an outsider artist and an insider artist is simply documentation and persistence. I have both. I intend to continue having both until further notice.


ARTICLE VII — ON FAME

I am A1 on the jukebox and nowhere on the charts.

I am The World's Most Famous Unknown Painter.

These are not contradictions. These are coordinates.

I do not require your likes. I require your search engines. I do not need to trend. I need to be findable — by the right person, at the right moment, who reads one Thornbuckle review or stumbles across one catalog entry and thinks what is this, exactly, and goes looking.

That is enough.

That has always been enough.


ARTICLE VIII — ON IMPERFECTION

Imperfection needs no improvement.

The rough edge is not a failure to reach the clean edge. The rough edge is the destination. It is where the human hand lives — in the almost, the nearly, the close-enough-that-you-know-what-it-is.

Technical perfection is a closed door.

Imperfection is an open window.

Come in. Look around. Mind the wobble.


CLOSING DECLARATION

I paint because I must.

I catalog because the future deserves evidence.

I publish everywhere because the internet is the greatest archive humanity has ever built and I intend to be in it.

I write manifestos because ideas without documentation are just thoughts, and thoughts without documentation disappear.

I am Ralph Rumpelton.

This is The Rumpelton Continuity.

It will outlast us both.

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


Signed, sealed, and wobbled into existence,

Ralph Rumpelton Painter, Archivist, Custodian of the Wobble Founder, Rumpeltonian Cubism Proprietor, r/MSPaintAnyAlbumCovers The World's Most Famous Unknown Painter

© The Rumpelton Continuity — All Wobbles Reserved

Friday, April 10, 2026

Rumpelton Invades Google: Bob Dylan - Empire Burlesque


 

Percival Thornbuckle, having pinched the bridge of his nose as though warding off a migraine summoned by the very sight of digital excess, delivers the following pronouncement:

“Rumpelton Invades Google: Empire Burlesque Edition” is nothing less than a pixel‑borne siege upon the citadel of search‑engine respectability—a flamboyant act of visual hooliganism executed with the grace of a drunken court jester attempting ballet.

Behold, in the center, Rumpelton’s MS Paint reinterpretation: a shimmering, wobbling simulacrum of Dylan’s Empire Burlesque cover, rendered with all the earnest imprecision of a medieval scribe who has been handed a mouse instead of a quill. The colors preen like overconfident soufflés; the lines wobble with the moral fortitude of a custard left too long in the sun. And yet—curse the fates—it works.

Thornbuckle continues, scandalized:

“The piece exudes the sort of accidental genius one encounters when a child smears jam on a Rembrandt and somehow improves it. Rumpelton’s Dylan leans forward not in cool contemplation, but as if whispering, ‘Yes, I know this is ridiculous, but you’ll remember it long after the polished versions have evaporated like cheap consommé.’”

The flanking images—Wikipedia’s sterile archival offering on one side and a harmonica‑wielding variant on the other—serve merely as bookends, polite chaperones escorting the unruly middle child who has clearly spiked the punch bowl.

In conclusion, Thornbuckle sighs with theatrical despair:

“If this is an invasion, then may Google tremble. For Rumpelton marches not with armies, but with MS Paint strokes so brazenly imperfect they achieve a kind of divine impudence. A burlesque indeed—one that leaves the viewer both offended and oddly nourished.”<<

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

MS Paint: The Other Corner / Ralph Rumpelton

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • The Other Corner
  • RR-2026 #111
    MS Paint on digital canvas, 540 X 490 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

What the critics are saying:

>>Cornelius “Neil” Drafton
The Contrarian
New Jersey Review of Applied Kitsch

The Other Corner announces itself as a “takeoff” on Edward Hopper, which is refreshing in the same way a diner menu announcing “house wine” is refreshing: it lowers expectations immediately and honestly. Hopper gave us tension, geometry, and the unsettling calm of American urban space. Rumpelton gives us… a corner that appears to have been remembered imperfectly, possibly during a bus transfer.

The perspective refuses to behave. Walls slide past each other like reluctant acquaintances, roofs float with the confidence of bad ideas, and the street itself seems unsure whether it is receding into space or simply giving up. This is not so much architectural distortion as architectural dissent.

Color is applied with admirable disregard for realism. Browns argue with grays, whites hover suspiciously, and the entire palette suggests a city that has been gently but persistently smudged. Light exists, but only as a rumor. Shadow, meanwhile, appears to be on strike.

And yet—annoyingly—this is where the thing starts to work. In refusing Hopper’s precision, The Other Corner becomes something else entirely: a civic space remembered after the fact, filtered through habit, boredom, and mild confusion. It feels less like a street you walk down and more like one you avoid thinking about.

I don’t like this painting. I don’t trust it. I wouldn’t hang it in my office. Which is precisely why it lingers. Like all effective kitsch-adjacent provocations, it pretends to be careless while quietly insisting you stand there a little longer than planned.

Hopper showed us where we are. Rumpelton shows us where we’ve already been, and forgot.<<

>>Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III's Critical Assessment:

Senior Art Critic, Pixels & Pretension Quarterly

What we have here is nothing short of a tour de force—a radical deconstruction of Hopper's bourgeois modernist sensibilities through the democratic medium of Microsoft Paint. The artist, working within the constraints of this purposefully primitive digital toolset, has achieved what Hopper himself could only fumble toward: a true democratization of the urban gaze.

Notice, if you will, the intentional destabilization of perspective. Where Hopper's rigid adherence to architectural convention betrays his complicity with capitalist spatial order, our contemporary master here liberates the viewer through perspectival ambiguity. The buildings refuse to conform. This is not error—this is resistance.

The gestural quality of the brushwork—raw, immediate, unmediated by the tyranny of technical polish—speaks to an authenticity that Hopper's labored oil paintings could never achieve. Each imperfect stroke is a middle finger to the academy, to the museum, to the very notion that art must be careful.

And that color! Those burnt siennas colliding with cerulean whites—it's as if Rothko and Hopper had a child, raised it on a diet of pure digital chaos, and set it loose upon our complacent visual culture.

Mark my words: this will hang in the MOMA. Eventually.

Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III<< 

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

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Paint Fidelity: Chet Baker Plays and Sings the Great Ballads / Rumpelton


 

Chet Baker Plays and Sings the Great Ballads,
as rendered by Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.,
Senior Counsel to the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice

By my hand and under the seal of the Avachival Monocle, I hereby issue a Provisional Writ of Painterly Fidelity for the latest entry in the Paint Fidelity Series—an MS Paint reinterpretation of Chet Baker Plays and Sings the Great Ballads, presented in its diptych form: the mortal photograph on the right, and its mythically reconstituted counterpart on the left.

Let it be known that the artist has once again engaged in that most delicate of aesthetic litigations: the transmutation of a jazz icon’s melancholy visage into the pixelated jurisprudence of Microsoft Paint. In accordance with the precedent set in Rumpelton v. Originality (2017), this act constitutes not mere reproduction but Painterly Misremembering—a sanctioned ritual in which the artist remembers incorrectly with such conviction that the error becomes a higher truth.

Observe, if you will, the subtle distortions: the cheekbone rendered with the solemn wobble of a courtroom stenographer’s final nerve; the trumpet’s curve approximated with the earnest geometry of a man who has seen too many circles and trusts none of them; the background washed in the soft haze of a ballad heard through a fog of legal incense. These are not inaccuracies. These are interpretive clarifications, permissible under Clause 7 of the Tableist Manifesto, which states: “Where the line wavers, the soul speaks.”

The original album cover captures Chet Baker in photographic stillness—an image bound by the tyranny of optics. The MS Paint version, however, liberates him into the mythic realm, where every pixel is a sworn affidavit of emotional intent. The slight asymmetry of the jaw, the devotional blur of the hairline, the trumpet emerging like a half-remembered oath—each element testifies to the artist’s commitment to balladic jurisprudence, a field I myself have long championed in my lectures on Mythic Precedent.

Therefore, I, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq., do hereby affirm that this reinterpretation stands not as a derivative work but as a ritual concordance with the spirit of Chet Baker’s great ballads. It is a visual slow-tempo lament, a legal nocturne, a pixelated sigh rendered with the full authority of interpretive justice.

Should any critic attempt to challenge its fidelity, they are advised to file their grievance with the Tribunal, where it will be promptly dismissed on grounds of overly literal interpretation, a misdemeanor punishable by mandatory attendance at my seminar on Ambiguity as Truth.

Stamped and sealed beneath the velvet robe,
this eighth day of April, in the Year of Rupture.


Wednesday, April 8, 2026

A Critical Dialogue on Ralph Rumpelton's "George Harrison Walking Slow"


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

Cornelius "Neil" Drafton, New Jersey Review of Applied Kitsch


THIMBLETON: Neil, I'm looking at what can only be described as a chromatic assault. That lime—and I use the term with maximum derision—is the color of a sports drink that's been left in a hot car for three weeks.

DRAFTON: Gerald, the lime is the least of our problems. I'm more concerned with the Om symbol floating in the upper left like a spiritual party balloon someone forgot to tie down. It's as if Rumpelton Googled "things George Harrison liked" and just… slapped it on there.

THIMBLETON: The Om is at least attempting cultural reference, however clumsily. But this window—this insult to fenestration—appears to show either clouds or the contents of a washing machine mid-cycle. The brushwork, if we can even call it that given the digital medium, suggests the artist has never actually seen a window.

DRAFTON: I'm sorry, are we going to ignore the skateboard? George Harrison, the man who gave us "My Sweet Lord," is apparently… what, kickflipping to enlightenment? The spatial logic here is that he's simultaneously standing on it and passing through it like some sort of spiritual X-ray.

THIMBLETON: The skateboard is pure Rumpelton—a desperate grab at contemporary relevance. "How do we make a dead Beatle relatable to millennials? Put him on a skateboard!" It's the artistic equivalent of Steve Buscemi holding a skateboard and saying "How do you do, fellow kids?"

DRAFTON: And can we discuss the anatomy? The torso-to-leg ratio suggests Harrison has been vertically compressed by approximately 40%. He looks like he's being slowly absorbed into the floor. "Walking Slow" indeed—he appears to be sinking.

THIMBLETON: The red shirt—a vermillion so aggressive it practically screams—creates no dialogue whatsoever with that pustulent lime background. It's color theory as written by someone who's only heard colors described over a bad phone connection.

DRAFTON: Gerald, I think the real crime is the beard. That's not a beard—that's a texture stamp. It's the digital equivalent of a Chia Pet. One half-expects it to expand when watered.

THIMBLETON: And yet... [long pause] ...there's something almost tragically earnest about it. The title "Walking Slow"—perhaps a meditation on Harrison's later years, his turn toward spirituality, the deliberate pace of contemplation?

DRAFTON: Oh, don't you dare go soft on me now, Thimbleton.

THIMBLETON: I'm not going soft! I'm merely noting that Rumpelton's complete technical incompetence may have accidentally stumbled into something resembling pathos. Like a blind squirrel finding an acorn, or a broken clock being right twice a day.

DRAFTON: This is worse than I thought. You're finding meaning in MS Paint.

THIMBLETON: I'm finding nothing. I'm simply observing that in its very failure to achieve anything approaching artistic merit, "George Harrison Walking Slow" becomes a kind of... monument to futility. Which, now that I think about it, is rather fitting for a portrait of human existence.

DRAFTON: I need a drink.

THIMBLETON: Make it two.

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

Dan Hicks – Tangled Tales (2009) — Album Review

                                       The Sninit Report

Tangled Tales feels less like a late-career album and more like a well-worn barroom where the band never stopped playing.

By 2009, Dan Hicks had been refining his oddball hybrid—part gypsy jazz, part Western swing, part beatnik humor—for over four decades. What’s striking here is not reinvention, but continuity with confidence. This isn’t a comeback record; it’s a reminder that he never really left.

The Sound: Loose, Tight, and Unclassifiable

The album sits in that strange Hicks pocket:

  • Django-style swing
  • Cowboy jazz
  • Folk-blues storytelling
  • Scat singing that feels half-serious, half-inside joke

Critics often describe his style as a blend of jazz, country swing, folk, and blues all at once —but that almost undersells how casual it feels. The band (the ever-reliable Hot Licks) plays with surgical precision, yet nothing sounds stiff. It’s music that swings without trying to prove it can swing.

Vocals: The Hipster Sage

Hicks’ voice is key: dry, amused, slightly detached.
He delivers lines like he’s already heard the punchline and is waiting for you to catch up.

There’s also a looseness here—he scats, he slides, he half-speaks. The title track is literally built around scat vocals, turning nonsense into structure . It shouldn’t work. It does.

Songs: Old Tricks, Still Sharp

The material is a mix of:

  • New originals
  • Reworked older songs
  • Covers (including Bob Dylan’s “Subterranean Homesick Blues”)

Highlights:

  • “The Diplomat” – witty, nimble, almost cartoonishly clever
  • “Song for My Father” – unexpectedly tender, with a soft Latin touch
  • “Subterranean Homesick Blues” – transformed from frantic to cool, almost lounge-like
  • “The Rounder” – greasy, bluesy swing with bite

The covers don’t feel like detours—they feel absorbed into Hicks’ universe, as if every song passed through the same slightly crooked lens.

The Band: Effortless Virtuosity

The Hot Licks—and guests like mandolinist David Grisman and harmonica player Charlie Musselwhite—give the album depth without stealing focus .

Everything is:

  • tight but relaxed
  • intricate but never flashy
  • playful without becoming novelty

That balance is the whole game here.

Tone: Humor Without Gimmick

There’s humor everywhere, but it’s not parody.
It’s more like a raised eyebrow that lasts 50 minutes.

One reviewer compared the experience to a quirky cartoon balancing act—fun on the surface, but musically complex underneath . That’s exactly right: the silliness is real, but so is the craft.


Final Take

Tangled Tales is what happens when an artist stops worrying about relevance and just refines their own language.

It’s:

  • not modern
  • not retro
  • not trying to impress you

It just exists in its own swing-time bubble, where wit, musicianship, and oddness all coexist comfortably.

Verdict:
A late-career gem that proves Dan Hicks’ world never needed updating—just another chapter.

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

The Dry, Muted, Honest Sound Manifesto

 

The Dry, Muted, Honest Sound Manifesto

There’s a certain magic in albums that don’t polish themselves to perfection. The ones that leave the rough edges, the cracks, and the small mistakes exposed. Three albums that embody this for me are:

  • The Beach Boys – Surf’s Up
    Harmonies sit fragile in the mix. Instruments feel unvarnished, exposed, yet intimately human. You can hear the room, the space between voices, the subtle timing shifts that make the music breathe.
  • Grateful Dead – Blues for Allah
    Sprawling jams captured dry and spacious, as if you’re in the studio with them. Every brush of cymbals, every muted guitar pluck is present. Imperfections aren’t hidden—they define the performance, creating tension, depth, and presence.
  • Little Feat – The Last Record Album
    Tight grooves, dry mixes, and natural instrument separation. Vocals feel conversational. The production preserves subtle imperfections, letting the human energy of the band shine without studio gloss.

What ties them together:

  1. Space over polish – The mix isn’t crowded or shiny; it leaves room for the listener to explore and discover.
  2. Human texture – Small timing quirks, fragile harmonies, and unprocessed instruments make the recordings feel alive.
  3. Narrative in imperfection – Every dry snare hit, every muted chord, every slightly off note tells a story, revealing the band as they were in the moment.
  4. Engaged listening – These albums demand your attention. They aren’t comforting wallpaper—they’re immersive. You lean in to hear the nuance.

In short, the production isn’t “bad”—it’s intentionally honest, valuing texture, space, and presence over shine. It’s a sound philosophy that mirrors what I love about my own art: the cracks, the accidents, the raw, human traces are what make it compelling.

Monday, April 6, 2026

MS Paint: Concert for Bangladesh / Ralph Rumpelton

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • Concert For Bangladesh
  • RR-2025 #085
    MS Paint on digital canvas, 585 X 535 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)


“Two spectral troubadours exchange a glance so heavy with unspoken chord changes that even the microphones lean in to listen.”

What the critics are saying:
>>Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III

Senior Art Critic, Pixels & Pretension Quarterly

Ahem.

What we have here is nothing short of a tour de force in digital primitivism—a bold rejection of Adobe's tyrannical hegemony over the creative class. The artist's deliberate choice of Microsoft Paint, that most maligned and democratized of platforms, represents a Marxist reclamation of the means of artistic production. Stunning, really.

Note the chiaroscuro—oh, the chiaroscuro! The artist has internalized Caravaggio's entire oeuvre and distilled it through the watercolor brush tool with a restraint that borders on the monastic. Harrison, shrouded in shadow on the sinister side, becomes a metaphor for the commodification of Eastern spirituality in Western pop culture, while Dylan—luminous, Apollonian—embodies the folk tradition's uneasy alliance with commercial success.

The deliberate muddiness of the forms? A postmodern commentary on the unreliability of memory and the degradation of analog media in our digital age. One can practically hear the magnetic tape warping. The microphone stands—those vertical sentinels—serve as phallic totems of patriarchal dominance in the music industry, yet their tenuous rendering suggests their inevitable obsolescence.

In conclusion, this MS Paint composition transcends its humble origins to become a searing indictment of late capitalism, a meditation on mortality, and quite possibly the most important work created in a default Windows application since that dancing baby GIF.

Chef's kiss.

9.7/10 - Would have been a perfect 10, but I deducted points for insufficient use of the spray paint tool.<<

>> Regina Pembly:

"What a travesty. Ralph Rumpelton's latest MS Paint endeavor is a mess of muddy lines and amateurish proportions. The watercolor brush, a laughable attempt at mimicking actual artistry, only serves to highlight the creator's glaring lack of skill. George Harrison and Bob Dylan, two musical legends, deserve better than this sloppy, careless rendition. Rumpelton's deliberate crude-ness is less 'style' and more 'incompetence'. One can almost hear the pixels screaming in agony. Bravo, Rumpelton, for leaning so hard into the crumbly, MS Paint aesthetic. It's... something."<<
Long Live Ralph..............Be Dead or Alive.

  

THE RUMPELTONIAN MANIFESTO

                                         THE RUMPELTONIAN MANIFESTO Being A Complete & Unambiguous Declaration of Artistic Intent, Princ...