What the critics are saying:
- Ralph Rumpelton
Santana has been Rumpeltized
RR-2025 #325Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 533 × 572 px
Created: 2025
The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
Collection of the Artist
What the critics are saying:
>>Cornelius “Neil” Drafton
The Contrarian
New Jersey Review of Applied Kitsch
Ralph Rumpelton’s Santana (Rumpeltized) is the sort of work that dares the viewer to ask the wrong question—namely, “Is this finished?” The correct question, of course, is “Why does it work despite itself?” Drafton is displeased to report that it does.
The figure appears less painted than summoned, as if Santana has been recalled mid-solo from a smoky pocket dimension where anatomy is optional but mood is mandatory. The hat floats with the confidence of a rumor. The face, carved with the emotional range of a tollbooth attendant at dawn, somehow achieves introspection through subtraction. This is not likeness-by-observation; it is likeness-by-insistence.
The guitar, grotesquely oversized and stubbornly central, dominates the composition like an uninvited truth. One suspects Rumpelton understands—perhaps accidentally—that Santana is less a man than a delivery system for sustained notes, and has painted accordingly. The background offers no refuge, no context, only the vague suggestion that sound itself has stained the air.
It would be easy to dismiss this as MS Paint cosplay or digital folk-art masochism. Unfortunately, that dismissal fails. The work persists. It hums. It lingers. Like Santana’s solos, it goes on slightly longer than one expects—and by the end, one is annoyed to discover that stopping it would feel like a loss.
I do not recommend this painting. I merely acknowledge that it exists, and that ignoring it requires more effort than it should.
— Cornelius “Neil” Drafton<<
>>Aurelia Vantor, from the essay collection The Amplifier Dreams in Color
There are portraits that attempt resemblance, and there are portraits that attempt voltage. Ralph Rumpelton’s Santana Has Been Rumpeltized belongs entirely to the second category. This is not Carlos Santana as photography understands him; this is Santana as transmission — a wandering signal caught halfway between nightclub smoke, FM radio static, and devotional iconography.
The first thing that strikes me is the instability of the figure. He seems to hover rather than stand, as though the guitar itself is generating enough spiritual electricity to suspend him above the dark. The anatomy bends in places, yes, but beautifully so. Rumpelton understands something many technically “correct” painters never learn: music distorts the body. A guitarist deep inside a solo does not remain anatomically faithful to reality. They melt into gesture.
The face is simplified almost to the point of myth. The mustache, the hat, the shadowed eyes — these become symbols rather than details, like fragments remembered from an overheated concert poster left in a basement since 1974. The turquoise pendant is especially important. It glows like a tiny third eye at the center of the composition, giving the painting a faintly mystical pulse that feels entirely appropriate for Santana’s blend of blues, Latin rhythm, and cosmic sermonizing.
And then there is the guitar itself: oversized, luminous, nearly architectural. In most portraits the instrument is an accessory. Here it is the nervous system. The strings slice across the canvas like rails of light, pulling the entire image forward. You can almost hear the sustained note hanging in the room long after the hand has left the fretboard.
What I admire most is that Rumpelton refuses polish. The blurred background, the smoky edges, the dreamlike proportions — all of it contributes to the sensation that this image was remembered rather than rendered. It feels haunted by live music. Too much refinement would have killed it instantly.
A lesser artist paints a celebrity.
Rumpelton paints the afterimage left behind once the amplifier cools down.<<
Long Live Ralph........Be Dead or Alive.




