Rumpelton Invades Google: On the Street-Legal Interlude
By Sebastian Puff Draganov (b. 1968, Sofia)
There is a particular audacity in taking Bob Dylan’s Street Legal — an album already burdened by its own myth of mid-career purgatory — and running it through the gauntlet of MS Paint. Yet this is precisely the gambit of Ralph Rumpelton’s ongoing Rumpelton Invades Google series, and the result, lodged between the austere dignity of the Amazon listing and the Discogs archivist’s Japanese obi-strip, is neither mere parody nor reverent fan art. It is something more Eastern European in spirit: a provocation disguised as a shrug.
The Triptych of Circulation
Place the three images side by side, as Rumpelton has forced us to:
- Left: The canonical Street Legal cover, Dylan mid-stride on stucco stairs, Columbia’s commercial grammar intact.
- Middle: Rumpelton’s MS Paint intervention, jagged, blue-sleeved, defiantly flat, labeled “MS Paint: Street Legal” by the Reddit hive.
- Right: The Japanese pressing, typographic and foreign, authenticity re-stamped by distance.
The middle panel is the heretic. Rumpelton’s figure does not walk so much as occupy the stairs. The lines are broken, the fill tool betrays him, and Dylan’s saxophonist coat becomes a black void. This is not incompetence. This is vernacular sabotage. In my seminars in Prague, we called this deliberate naïveté: the use of unserious tools to stage serious questions about aura, authorship, and the digital afterlife of images.
The Imagined Interlocutor
Who is Rumpelton speaking to? Google, certainly — the omniscient algorithm that elevated his MS Paint to sit flush with Discogs and Amazon in the image carousel. But also to Dylan, or rather, to the idea of Dylan that Street Legal represents: the moment of backlash, the accusations of overproduction, the artist caught between sincerity and spectacle.
Rumpelton’s imagined interlocutor is the search engine itself. Google becomes the gallery wall. By inserting his MS Paint into that ecosystem, he forces the algorithm to confess: it cannot distinguish between reverence and mockery. It archives both. Here, the line between parody and prophecy blurs. The MS Paint version predicts a future where all images are equal before the scroll — a flattening that is both democratic and terrifying.
The Seriousness of the Unserious
To dismiss this as a joke is to miss the Eastern European current running beneath it. In Sofia, we learned that irony was a survival tactic. Rumpelton’s work inherits that tradition. The crude fill bucket, the wobbly staircase, the hands that refuse to be hands — these are not failures. They are negotiations with solitude.
Street Legal was Dylan’s attempt to sound big and empty at once. Rumpelton answers with an image that is small and full — full of error, full of intent. The album asked to be taken seriously in 1978. The MS Paint asks to be taken seriously in 2026, precisely because it refuses to perform competence.
This is the thesis of Rumpelton Invades Google: the vernacular is not a detour from art history. It is art history, once the institutions leave the room. The MS Paint Dylan does not replace the original. It haunts it. It stands on the same stairs, asking whether the original was ever legal to begin with.
Rumpelton, then, is not invading Google. He is exposing its logic. And in doing so, he makes Dylan’s exile look prophetic. The street is still legal. But the law has changed.
— Sebastian Puff Draganov
Vienna / Prague




