What the critics are saying:
>> Eunice Gribble, Avachives Series Curator
The Rumpeltonian reinterpretation of Bill Evans: Further Ahead arrives not as homage, but as a test—of memory, of sincerity, of the viewer’s tolerance for grayscale restraint. Rendered in MS Paint with what I can only describe as “deliberate austerity,” the piece invites us to consider Evans not as a man, but as a format: compressed, flattened, and ambiguously indexed.
The profile—clean to the point of anonymity—offers no emotional metadata. Is this Evans mid-solo, post-solo, or pre-exit? The brushwork behind him, a swirl of spa-grade blues and purples, gestures vaguely toward introspection but lands closer to desktop wallpaper. The “Elemental” badge, orphaned in the top corner, reads less like a curatorial stamp and more like a misplaced UI element from a discontinued app.
And yet, the piece succeeds. Not in beauty, but in provocation. It dares to ask: what happens when jazz’s most haunted technician is rendered in a program that cannot weep? The answer, apparently, is this: a portrait that refuses to emote, a title that refuses to resolve, and a signature (“Ralph Rumpelton”) that sits like a watermark on a leaked file.
This is not a painting. It is a format confrontation. And I, for one, am not blinking.
— Eunice Gribble, Avachives Series Curator
Former Deputy Chair, Museum of Format Integrity (defunct)<<
>>Bill Evans: Further Ahead (MS Paint, R. Rumpelton, 2025)
>>Reviewed by Dr. Norbert F. Vensmire (b. 1947, location disputed)
Professor Emeritus, Royal Institute of Semiotic Studies, Antwerp
Let us dispense, if only briefly, with pretense: Further Ahead, Rumpelton’s digital paean to jazz titan Bill Evans, is not merely a portrait—it is a rupture. Executed in MS Paint (that most proletarian of image-forging apparatuses), the piece eschews the fastidious polish of conventional homage and instead elects for glorified imprecision, embracing its own errors like a bebop solo teetering on the edge of collapse.
The figure of Evans—rendered in gauche, almost ecclesiastical profile—hovers not in realism but in interpretive chiaroscuro, half-man, half-myth, wholly flattened. His jaw, a cubist afterthought. His spectacles, two uncertain orbits in a constellation of chromatic doubt. One is reminded, in extremis, of the late Czech glitch-priest Jan Bělohradský, whose “Face Series” (1991–93) similarly flirted with the grotesque as form.
Textually, the piece is a minefield of semiotic play. "LIVE IN FINLAND" is nearly illegible, scrawled in ghostly cerulean as if whispering from the margins of memory. The temporal bracket “1964–1969” appears not as a date range, but as numerical liturgy—a quiet prayer to lost moments improvised and unrecoverable. The titular “FURTHER AHEAD” practically screams in white, its hand-scrawled urgency betraying a fear that perhaps we’ve already gone too far.
One could, of course, critique the anatomy, the draftsmanship, the composition itself. But to do so would be to miss the point entirely. Rumpelton is not interested in likeness; he is excavating auratic residue. This is jazz, not journalism.
In sum: Further Ahead is an act of pixelated defiance, a sui generis bricolage that rejects fidelity in favor of feeling. Whether viewed as homage, parody, or subcultural semaphore, it remains resolutely unresolved—a digital canvas whose very awkwardness becomes a kind of truth.
More subversive than Caravaggio? Perhaps not. But ask yourself: when did Caravaggio ever open MS Paint?<<
Long Live Ralph....Be Dead or Alive.