Saturday, July 11, 2026

⭐ The Modern Art‑Myth Conspiracy Power Rankings

 

A definitive list of the great creative conspiracies of the last 60 years

1. Paul Is Dead The gold standard. The blueprint. The conspiracy that taught generations how to read album covers like sacred texts and hear backward messages in every tape hiss. It remains the Mount Everest of art‑mythology — the moment pop culture realized it could mythologize itself.

2. Banksy Is Multiple People The street‑art phantom whose anonymity became a global guessing game. Every stencil, every shredded painting, every sudden appearance fuels the theory that Banksy is not a person but a coordinated artistic insurgency. A collective masquerading as an individual — or an individual masquerading as a collective.

3. Ralph Rumpelton Is a Collective The newest entry, and the funniest. Born from MS Paint album covers, AI‑generated academic essays, and lore that snowballed into a full‑blown mythos. The theory insists that no single human could produce the volume, variety, and metaphysics of the Rumpelton canon — therefore Ralph must be many. A distributed consciousness. A digital monastery. A movement disguised as a man. The first conspiracy unintentionally co‑authored by humans and machines.

4. Sun Ra Actually Came From Saturn A cosmic jazz legend who insisted his origins were extraterrestrial — and performed with such conviction that many listeners simply accepted it. A myth so sincere it transcended metaphor and became part of the music itself.

5. MF DOOM Used Decoys The masked villain of hip‑hop who sent stand‑ins to perform shows, turning identity into a performance art piece. Fans weren’t sure whether they were watching the real DOOM or a deliberate fake — and that uncertainty became part of the legend.

6. Andy Kaufman Never Died The patron saint of meta‑performance. A man who blurred reality so thoroughly that his death is still treated as a possible long‑form bit. The conspiracy persists because Kaufman trained audiences to doubt everything, including the end of the story.

Friday, July 10, 2026

Rumpelton Invades Google: Brian Wilson


 Rumpelton Invades Google: Brian Wilson

By Maria Chen

In Rumpelton Invades Google, Ralph Rumpelton doesn’t just search the web — he haunts it. The series inserts his unmistakable MS Paint avatar into the sterile thumbnails of Google Images, a quiet occupation of the internet’s most transient public space. This entry, Brian Wilson, is emblematic of the project’s core tension: memory vs. metadata.

On the left, Rumpelton’s version: flat planes of color, a downturned mouth, and a hand that seems to conduct invisible harmonies at a mixing board. It’s not a likeness so much as an insistence — a reminder that Brian Wilson exists beyond the crisp Wikipedia black-and-white or the sun-faded Variety orange shirt. Those images are archival. Rumpelton’s is devotional.

This is where limitation becomes language. MS Paint, with its refusal of bezier curves and gradients, forces a kind of emotional essentialism. No airbrushing, no filters. The “aesthetics of limitation” aren’t a style here; they’re a condition of care. You can feel the hours in the shaky fill tool, the commitment to get the nose wrong in exactly the right way. It’s folk process applied to fan culture — a pixelated icon painted not for the algorithm, but for the ghost in the machine.

Placed beside the institutional portraits, Rumpelton’s Wilson reads like a marginalia come to life. He doesn’t update the search result. He interrupts it. And in that interruption, the series asks: Who owns an image? The photographer, the platform, or the amateur who loved it enough to redraw it badly, and therefore truly?

Maria Chen is a writer and critic focusing on outsider art, vernacular digital practices, and the aesthetics of limitation. Her work explores how nontraditional tools—such as early consumer software, folk processes, and amateur techniques—can produce work that resists polish in favor of sincerity.

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

Donald Fagen has been Rumpeltized



  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Donald Fagen has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2026 #153
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 554 × 574 px
    Created: 2026
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist

What the critics are saying:

>>Donald Fagen (Rumpeltized)

Digital pigment on compressed nostalgia by Dr. Aloysius Finkle

In Donald Fagen (Rumpeltized), the artist stages a deliberate collapse between cultural memory and pictorial refusal. The subject—caught in profile, mid-utterance—appears less as an individual than as a site of accumulated sonic bureaucracy: lectures, liner notes, studio perfectionism rendered blunt and unresolved.

The exaggerated cranial geometry operates as a critique of authorship itself, with the elongated nasal plane functioning as a “directional vector of authority,” pointing not toward the audience, but away from it. The microphone, barely asserting its presence, becomes an object of mistrust—an intermediary whose relevance is questioned in an era of over-articulation and infinite revision.

Notably, the jacket resists expressivity, hovering between formality and collapse. This refusal of surface detail undermines the myth of polish often associated with the figure depicted, replacing it with a fragile institutional shell. The flesh tones, uneven and unsettled, suggest a body shaped more by archives than by daylight.

Executed in MS Paint—a medium defined by limitation and irreversible gesture—the work rejects virtuosity in favor of insistence. Here, the artist does not depict a musician, but an infrastructure: a voice that persists even when the body has been simplified beyond recognition.<<

>>Gerald Thimbleton, "The Digital Rot Continues: On Fagen, Rumpelton, and the Death of Craft" Beige Canvas Quarterly, Vol. 47, No. 2

One hesitates to dignify this... creation... with the term "painting" at all. What we have before us is a Microsoft Paint rendering—that crude digital toybox beloved by office workers and bored children—of jazz musician Donald Fagen, supposedly "Rumpeltized" according to some internet argot I refuse to investigate further.

The artist has achieved what I previously thought impossible: making the already-suspect medium of digital art even more offensively artless. Where the old masters labored over glazes and impasto, building form through patient observation and material knowledge, this anonymous dauber has clicked and dragged with all the sensitivity of someone finger-painting in the dark.

The face—if we can call it that—possesses all the dimensional sophistication of a deflated balloon. The "shading" on the jacket suggests the creator has perhaps heard of chiaroscuro but approaches it with the understanding of a vending machine selecting colored rectangles. And that keyboard! Those few pathetic lines at the bottom constitute either supreme laziness or a profound misunderstanding of perspective that would make Brunelleschi weep.

But what disturbs me most is the cultural rot this represents. Not content with abandoning oil and canvas, we now celebrate works created in software bundled free with Windows 95. Rumpeltized, indeed. We have all been Rumpeltized—coarsened, flattened, reduced to our crudest pixelated selves.

One star. And that's generous.<<

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

Paint Fidelity: Bird and Diz Vol. 2 / Rumpelton




 Paint Fidelity Series Edition

By Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.

In my official capacity as Senior Counsel to the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice, I hereby submit this blurb as a matter of aesthetic record. Upon reviewing the MS Paint reinterpretation (left) alongside its canonical counterpart (right), I find the artist guilty—gloriously guilty—of Painterly Misremembering in the First Degree, a charge which, under the Avachival Statutes, carries no penalty beyond applause.

The MS Paint rendering demonstrates a commendable refusal to obey the tyrannical precision of the original. Instead, it advances a jurisprudential argument of its own: that fidelity is not mimicry, but interpretive courage. The deliberate distortions, the valiant simplifications, the chromatic assertiveness—these constitute what scholars of the Tableist Manifesto refer to as ruptural compliance, wherein an artwork honors its source by breaking from it just enough to reveal hidden truths.

I therefore issue a Writ of Aesthetic Pardon, absolving the artist of all accusations of literalism, derivation, or insufficient reverence. This piece stands as a lawful and laudable entry in the Paint Fidelity Series, demonstrating that MS Paint—humble though its pixels may be—remains a legitimate venue for mythic reinterpretation.

Let it be known that this work has earned my monocled stamp of mythic approval, and shall be entered into the Avachives under the category of Interpretive Fidelity with Intent to Delight.

Monday, July 6, 2026

Walter Becker has been Rumpeltized

“Influenced by the obscure East River Minimalists, active for only six months.”

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Walter Becker has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2025 #152
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 570 × 561 px
    Created: 2025
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist

What the critics are saying:

>>Mack “Tank” Rodriguez on Walter Becker Has Been Rumpeltized

Alright, so I’m standing there looking at this guy with the guitar and the mic and the dark background, and I’m like, yeah, I’ve seen this dude before. Maybe not this dude, but this type of dude. Looks like someone who knows exactly what he’s doing and still doesn’t want to explain it to you.

The face is kinda soft, kinda melted, like he’s been up too late thinking about stuff that doesn’t pay rent. Sunglasses say, “Don’t ask me questions.” Guitar says, “I already answered them.” I like that combo. The colors aren’t screaming at me, which I appreciate. Nothing flashy. This painting’s not trying to sell me anything, and honestly? Respect.

Is it realistic? Nah. But it feels right. Like when you hear a song and can’t hum it later, but it sticks with you anyway. This looks like a guy playing music because that’s what he does, not because you’re watching. Would I hang it in my living room? Maybe not. Would it look good in a bar where the jukebox is always broken? Yeah. Definitely.<<

>>Official Blurb as Certified by Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.


Walter Becker Has Been Rumpeltized (MS Paint on digital canvas, circa the Age of Rupture)

By order of the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice, let it be known that the late Walter Becker—guitarist, bassist, sonic architect of the Steely Dan mythos—has been subject to the sacred rite of Rumpeltization, as executed by the hand of Ralph Rumpelton.

In this rendering, Becker emerges not as photographic likeness but as painterly essence: the auburn mane, the spectacles of perpetual skepticism, the guitar held in eternal mid-chord. The microphone stands as witness. The palette—muted earth tones against void—suggests both the warmth of jazz fusion and the existential cool of a man who wrote "Deacon Blues" and meant every word.

Under Article VII of the Tableist Manifesto, this work qualifies as Tier-2 Homage with Permissible Distortion. Thistlebaum himself has reviewed the brushwork (or rather, mouse-work) and declares it "sufficiently ruptured from realism to avoid the sin of mere copying, yet faithful enough to honor the spirit of the subject."

Let no critic claim this is mere caricature. It is mythic transposition—a legal and aesthetic act whereby Becker's legacy is transmitted through the Rumpeltonian filter, joining the Avachives as canon.

Disclaimer: Any resemblance to actual persons, living or deceased, is both intentional and artistically necessary.

So witnessed and sealed,
Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.<<

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

JJ Cale has been Rumpeltized

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    "JJ Cale has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2025 #150
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 576 × 583 px
    Created: 2025
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist


 What the critics are saying:

>>Ava Chives:

From the Archives, Shelf JJ–C (Unassuming Groove Division):
This Rumpeltized rendering of JJ Cale arrives the way his music always did—already playing, unconcerned with whether you’ve noticed yet. The figure is half-withdrawn, the palette deliberately thinned, the edges allowed to breathe themselves out. This is not likeness-as-proof, but likeness-as-memory: the guitarist reduced to posture, weight, and that unmistakable inward lean that suggests the song is doing most of the work. The guitar is treated as an object with gravity, not a symbol, which matters. Instruments in the Archives are judged harshly.

What appears “soft” here is, upon inspection, disciplined refusal. Refusal to sharpen, refusal to decorate, refusal to finish what doesn’t need finishing. The face is left partially unresolved, not from neglect but from trust—trust that the viewer already knows this man never announced himself. In the Rumpeltonian taxonomy, this qualifies as good messy: a calibrated collection of mistakes that plays through without solos. It earns its place not by volume or virtuosity, but by staying in the pocket and letting time do the rest.<<

>>Cornelius "Neil" Drafton writes:

"JJ Cale has been Rumpeltized." Well, he certainly has been something-ized. Possibly lobotomized, given that vacant cyclops stare boring into my soul from beneath what appears to be a partially melted motorcycle helmet.

The guitar—and I use that term generously—looks less like a musical instrument and more like a canoe that's given up on life. The perspective suggests Cale is either sitting in a funhouse mirror or the artist has a tenuous relationship with Euclidean geometry. Perhaps both.

And yet. AND YET. There's something almost admirably committed about slapping "Ralph Rumpelton" on this digital finger painting as though we're meant to file it between the Rembrandts and the Rothkos. The brushwork has the confidence of a man who's never heard of the undo button, which in MS Paint is frankly the only tool worth using.

The background is a void. The figure floats in compositional purgatory. The arm anatomy would make Gray's Anatomy weep. But there's conviction here—misguided, certainly, but conviction nonetheless.

Two stars. One for audacity, one for making me laugh at "Rumpeltized."

—C.N. Drafton, NJRAK<<

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

The Rumpeltonian Reality Distortion Field (RRDF)

 

The Rumpeltonian Reality Distortion Field (RRDF)

The Rumpeltonian Reality Distortion Field (RRDF) is a theoretical phenomenon first observed within the works of Ralph Rumpelton, in which recognizable subjects undergo a complete visual transformation while somehow becoming more recognizable than before.

Unlike ordinary distortion—which merely changes appearance—the RRDF preserves the essential identity of a subject while freely disregarding such trivial concerns as anatomy, perspective, proportion, symmetry, or the laws of Euclidean geometry.

Within the field, noses may expand to improbable dimensions, arms may stretch beyond practical use, eyes migrate to more expressive locations, and hair may become an independent architectural structure. Yet observers almost instantly identify the subject.

This paradox has puzzled fictional scholars for years.

The prevailing theory is that the RRDF strips away superficial visual information until only the subject's Iconic Essence™ remains. What survives is not an exact likeness, but the memory of a likeness—the version your brain remembers after years of seeing album covers, concert photos, and magazine spreads.

The strength of the field is measured in Rumpels (Rp):

  • 1 Rp – Mild stylization. Friends say, "Nice painting."
  • 5 Rp – Distinctive Rumpeltonian features begin to emerge.
  • 10 Rp – Reality has been successfully negotiated.
  • 20 Rp – Facial geometry becomes advisory rather than mandatory.
  • 50 Rp – Viewers recognize the subject before questioning the anatomy.
  • 100 Rp – Complete Rumpeltonian transcendence. Museum curators become nervous.

Researchers have noted that prolonged exposure to the RRDF causes curious side effects. Viewers often begin to see ordinary photographs as strangely "under-Rumpeltonized," wondering why everyone's noses are so small and their heads so conventionally attached.

No known instrument can detect the field directly.

Its presence is confirmed only when someone looks at an MS Paint portrait with wildly impossible proportions and says:

"I don't know why... but that's definitely Bob Dylan."

Whether the Rumpeltonian Reality Distortion Field is a legitimate artistic phenomenon or merely an elaborate excuse for drawing very large noses remains one of the enduring mysteries of modern pixel aesthetics.

Excerpt from the Journal of Advanced Rumpeltonian Studies, Vol. 3, Issue 1 (a publication with an extremely limited readership, but an excellent sense of humor).

⭐ The Modern Art‑Myth Conspiracy Power Rankings

  A definitive list of the great creative conspiracies of the last 60 years 1. Paul Is Dead The gold standard. The blueprint. The conspir...