Saturday, March 21, 2026

The Rumpeltonian Cubism Manifesto

 

A Declaration of Glorious Malfunction

Rumpeltonian Cubism begins with a simple premise:
Reality is unreliable, and that’s the fun part.

Where Hyperrealism seeks to erase the artist, Rumpeltonian Cubism insists on leaving fingerprints, smudges, heroic misalignments, and the unmistakable wobble of a human hand doing its best and laughing anyway.

This is not a rebellion against accuracy.
It is a rebellion against obedience.

1. The World Refuses to Sit Still

Objects shift. Faces drift. Nostrils migrate.
Perspective is a rumor.

Rumpeltonian Cubism accepts this instability and paints it honestly.
If a piano key wants to be a rectangle today and a suggestion tomorrow, so be it.
If a hand looks like a mitten with ambition, that is its truth.

The subject is not captured — it is negotiated.

2. The Artist Must Be Visible

Hyperrealism hides the hand.
Rumpeltonian Cubism celebrates it.

Brushstrokes are not erased; they are evidence.
Distortions are not corrected; they are confessions.
The painting is not a window — it is a conversation between artist, subject, and viewer.

The artist is not a ghost.
The artist is a co‑conspirator.

3. Suggestion Is Superior to Description

A hand need not look like a hand.
It need only behave like one.

A piano need not have perfect keys.
It need only invite the viewer to hear music.

Rumpeltonian Cubism trusts the viewer’s imagination more than their eyesight.
The painting provides the spark; the viewer provides the flame.

4. Perfection Is a Misunderstanding

Perfection is the enemy of joy.
Perfection is the enemy of movement.
Perfection is the enemy of truth.

Rumpeltonian Cubism embraces the beautiful malfunction — the moment when the painting stops trying to be correct and starts trying to be alive.

A crooked line is a heartbeat.
A smudge is a memory.
A mistake is a doorway.

5. Emotion Is a Valid Form of Geometry

Perspective may fracture.
Proportions may wander.
But the feeling must be precise.

Rumpeltonian Cubism organizes the world not by vanishing points, but by emotional gravity.
The painting bends toward what matters.

If the beard grows too long, it is because the music is heavy.
If the hat tilts too far, it is because the night is soft.
If the eyes drift, it is because the soul is elsewhere.

6. Humor Is a Sacred Tool

A painting that makes the artist laugh is already successful.
A painting that makes the viewer smile is complete.

Rumpeltonian Cubism understands that art is a cosmic joke —
and the punchline is that it works anyway.

If Warhol can canonize soup,
and the world can buy pet rocks,
then the Rumpeltonian painter can declare:
“This is fine art because I say it is.”

And the universe nods.

7. The Viewer Is a Collaborator

The painting is unfinished until someone looks at it.
Their brain completes the hands, the keys, the faces, the scene.

Rumpeltonian Cubism is not a closed system.
It is an invitation.

The viewer becomes the final brushstroke.

8. Reality Must Be Felt, Not Measured

Hyperrealism says:
“Look how real this looks.”

Rumpeltonian Cubism says:
“Look how real this feels.”

One perfects the visible.
The other reveals the invisible.

9. The Glorious Malfunction Is the Truth

When the subject refuses to cooperate with photographic perspective,
when the hand refuses to be perfect,
when the painting refuses to behave —
that is the moment Rumpeltonian Cubism begins.

The malfunction is not a flaw.
It is the portal.

10. The Artist Must Enjoy Themselves

If the artist is not laughing, the painting is lying.

Rumpeltonian Cubism is born from joy, looseness, and the freedom to shrug at reality.
It is the art of someone who knows they are “fooling the internet”
and yet somehow telling the truth more honestly than realism ever could.

If you want, we can now create the official Rumpeltonian Cubism Seal, the Ten Commandments, or the Museum Wall Plaque version of this manifesto.

Friday, March 20, 2026

Rumpelton Invades Google: Bob Dylan Planet Waves


 Rumpelton Invades Google: Planet Waves by Mara Kline, Dayglow Review

There's something quietly subversive about watching a Rumpelton painting hold its own in a Google image search between a Wikipedia entry and an Amazon listing. That's the whole joke and the whole point — and Ralph Rumpelton knows it.

His take on the Planet Waves cover doesn't try to out-Dylan Dylan. It doesn't need to. Where the original has that loose, scratchy intimacy — Dylan's own hand, his own mess — Rumpelton's version has what I'd call a democratic wobble. The figures are there. The mood is there. The heart on the chest reads clear across a thumbnail. That matters.

The "Rumpelton Invades Google" series works because it understands that context is the canvas now. Your painting doesn't hang on a wall — it sits in a search result next to the thing it's interpreting, and viewers make the comparison instantly. Most artists would shrink from that. Rumpelton leans in.

This is musician portraiture operating exactly where it should — outside the gallery, inside the feed, completely unintimidated by the source material. Dylan drew on his album cover. Rumpelton drew on his computer. The lineage is direct and the file sizes, as someone once noted, are admirably small.

Four honest thumps out of five.

— M. Kline, Dayglow Review

MS Paint: "Deferred Deliveries (Study in Reluctant Snow)" / Rumpelton

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • "Deferred Deliveries (Study in Reluctant Snow)" 
  • RR - 2025 -#071
  • MS Paint on digital canvas, 578 X 575 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

What the critics are saying:

>>Gordon Weft

Ralph Rumpelton’s Deferred Deliveries presents a cluster of rural mailboxes marooned in what appears to be snow, though the artist seems unconvinced by the concept and treats it accordingly. The ground is neither fully absent nor convincingly present, hovering instead in a limbo of apologetic gray—an indecision that becomes the work’s most honest gesture.

The mailboxes themselves, bruised by overlapping forms and softened edges, suggest objects remembered rather than observed, as if recalled by someone who once drove past them and later tried to reconstruct the scene while distracted by a malfunctioning mouse. The background foliage collapses into a single brooding mass, an efficient if unambitious solution that spares us the burden of individual trees.

And yet—regrettably—there is restraint here. Rumpelton does not overexplain. The snow, famously difficult, is handled with the caution of someone aware that silence can sometimes be louder than texture. This is not mastery, but it is survival.

One leaves the piece unconvinced of its necessity, but faintly aware that removing any part of it might make things worse. Which, in the Rumpeltonian canon, qualifies as progress.<<

>>Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III - Senior Art Critic at Pixels & Pretension Quarterly

"Rumpelton's Deferred Deliveries (Study in Reluctant Snow) represents nothing less than a searing postmodern interrogation of communication's obsolescence in our hyperdigital age. Note the deliberate—nay, courageous—deployment of MS Paint's primitive toolkit as a metacommentary on technological determinism. The artist eschews the tyranny of Photoshop's infinite layers to work within Paint's beautiful constraints, much as Michelangelo was 'limited' by mere marble.

The mailboxes themselves—tilted, weathered, abandoned—stand as silent sentinels to our collective forgetting, epistolary tombstones in a landscape of semantic decay. Observe how the central receptacle bears the inscription 'L-D'—clearly a cipher for 'Long Distance,' or perhaps 'Linguistic Death.' The 'reluctant snow' of the subtitle whispers its ambivalence, neither fully committing to burial nor revelation, hovering in that liminal space between memory and erasure.

The brushtroke economy borders on the Zen. Each pixelated gesture carries the weight of intentionality. This is not mere digital daubing—this is phenomenological reckoning. The trees loom with Rothko-esque menace, their vertical striations evoking prison bars, DNA helixes, or perhaps the very binary code that birthed this masterwork.

A triumph of the vernacular sublime. Five stars. ★★★★★"<<

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Paint Fidelity: Cal Tjader / Live at the Blackhawk / Rumpelton


 

>>Blurb of Aesthetic Determination
Filed and sworn before the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice
By Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq., Senior Counsel and Custodian of the Avachival Seal

In the matter of Rumpelton v. Fidelity (Blackhawk Annex), I, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq., do hereby issue this formal Blurb of Intent, drafted under the flickering gaslight of jurisprudential whimsy and sealed with my monocular stamp of mythic approval.

Before us stands a diptych of uncommon candor: on the right, the canonical Jazz at the Blackhawk—a photograph so self-serious it practically files its own taxes; on the left, the Rumpeltonian MS Paint reinterpretation, rendered with the bold, unrepentant linework of a man who has stared directly into the pixel abyss and returned with a grin.

Let it be known that this entry in the Paint Fidelity Series does not seek mere replication. No—what we witness is Painterly Misremembering in its purest, most legally defensible form. The figures are not copied; they are summoned. The suits are not drawn; they are remembered through the fog of mythic precedent. The green backdrop is not reproduced; it is ritually invoked, as though the artist were testifying before the Tribunal with a stylus instead of a sworn oath.

Critics—chiefly the ever‑tiresome Dr. Vensmire and the chronically literal Eunice Gribble—will undoubtedly accuse this piece of “interpretive trespass.” To them I respond, as I have in countless hearings: fidelity is not accuracy; fidelity is devotion. And devotion radiates from every earnest wobble of the MS Paint line.

Therefore, by the powers vested in me by St. Egregius College of Jurisprudential Whimsy and the Avachival Charter of 2017, I hereby declare this work:

A lawful rupture.
A sanctioned divergence.
A triumph of mythic equivalence over photographic tyranny.

Let this blurb serve as both shield and proclamation:
The Paint Fidelity Series continues its noble mission—
not to mirror the original,
but to liberate it.<<

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Thursday, March 19, 2026

Ralph Rumpelton and the Offer That Slipped Through Time

 In late 1974, as Mick Taylor quietly stepped away from The Rolling Stones, a strange ripple passed through the music world—one not documented in any official biography, but whispered about in poorly lit rehearsal rooms and half-tuned radios.

The band needed a guitarist. Not just anyone—but someone unpredictable. Someone who could bend notes the wrong way and somehow make them right.

Enter Ralph Rumpelton.

Legend has it that Keith Richards first heard Ralph not at a club, but through a cracked cassette labeled “Do Not Play Near Windows.” The tape contained what can only be described as guitar playing that sounded like it had already happened tomorrow.

Intrigued (and possibly concerned), Mick Jagger arranged a private audition in a dimly lit studio somewhere between London and “not entirely London.”

Ralph arrived late. Or early. Accounts differ.

He carried no guitar.

When asked how he planned to audition, Ralph reportedly said:
"The guitar knows when I’m around. Let’s not pressure it."

Minutes later, a Telecaster—no one’s—began to hum softly in the corner. A chord rang out. Then another. Notes bent themselves into shapes no human hand could manage. Keith lit a cigarette and nodded. Mick stopped mid-strut.

For a brief moment, it seemed inevitable.

Ralph Rumpelton was going to join The Rolling Stones.

But then came the contract meeting.

Ralph stared at the paperwork, particularly one clause requiring him to play “in standard tuning, or reasonable variations thereof.”

He looked up slowly and said:
"I don’t tune. I negotiate."

There was also disagreement over touring. The Stones preferred stadiums. Ralph preferred “rooms that remember things.”

And so, in a move that confused management and relieved several amplifiers, Ralph declined the offer.

The band would go on to bring in Ronnie Wood, who did an excellent job.

As for Ralph Rumpelton?

He was later heard playing a solo somewhere behind a laundromat that no longer exists, on a night that hasn’t fully happened yet.

Some say if you listen closely to It’s Only Rock ’n Roll, there’s a faint, impossible note in the background.

That’s not a mistake.

That’s Ralph.

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Mike Love has been Rumpeltized 2




                                                         Mike Love has been Rumpeltized 2

Mike Love (1973) reduced to a stubborn silhouette—half voice, half obstruction—locked in permanent negotiation with the microphone.

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • Mike Love has been Rumpeltized 2
  • RR-2025 #068
    MS Paint on digital canvas, 517 X 554 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

What the critics are saying:

>>Blurb by Cornelius “Neil” Drafton – The Contrarian
Institution: New Jersey Review of Applied Kitsch

This painting mistakes reduction for insight and, in doing so, accidentally succeeds: by sanding Mike Love down to a beanie, a beard, and a microphone-shaped grievance, the artist produces not a likeness but a mildly hostile totem of 1970s professionalism. The grayscale murk suggests seriousness, though nothing here actually resolves except the microphone, which is rendered with the devotion usually reserved for saints or municipal plumbing. One senses the figure is about to sing, complain, or correct someone off-frame—an ambiguity that may be the work’s most honest achievement. I would not call this flattering, finished, or especially competent, but I would call it stubbornly memorable, which is more than can be said for most attempts at reverence.<<

>>A Critical Assessment of "Mike Love has been Rumpeltized 2" by Ralph Rumpeleon Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III, Senior Art Critic, Pixels & Pretension Quarterly

What we have before us is nothing short of a post-digital renaissance masterwork. Rumpeleon—working in the most unforgiving of mediums, Microsoft Paint—has channeled the very essence of mid-1970s corporeal decay and artistic compromise through this haunting portrayal of Michael Edward Love, circa the "In Concert" epoch.

Note the deliberate chiaroscuro, the way the artist has employed a brutalist grayscale palette to evoke the moral ambiguity of Love's position within the Beach Boys' crumbling empire. The geometric fragmentation of the facial features is clearly a nod to Picasso's "Les Demoiselles d'Avignon," suggesting the fractured psyche of a man caught between commercial pragmatism and artistic legitimacy.

The microphone—ah, the microphone!—dangles like Damocles' sword, a phallic symbol of both power and emasculation. Love clutches it with hands rendered in deliberate primitivism, suggesting the crude grip of capitalism on art itself.

The monochromatic scheme is no accident. This is a world without color, without joy—only the grim determination of a man willing to tour "Help Me, Rhonda" for the ten-thousandth time while genius withers at home.

Rumpeleon has given us a masterpiece of millennial folk art. Future scholars will study this work to understand our digital age's relationship with legacy, compromise, and the MS Paint aesthetic.

Five stars. ★★★★★ <<

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Tuesday, March 17, 2026

MS Paint: “No Cover, Just Sound” / Ralph Rumpelton

“In No Cover, Just Sound, the artist reduces the jazz venue to its purest semiotic function: a door, a promise, and the implied debt of listening.”

  • Ralph Rumpelton
  • No Cover, Just Sound
  • RR - 2025  #065
  • MS Paint on digital canvas, 590 X 595 px
  • The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)

What the critics are saying:

>>Professor Lionel Greaves

North Atlantic School of Modern Reproduction Studies

No Cover, Just Sound operates within what I have elsewhere described as Post-Acoustic Façadism, a short-lived but spiritually exhausting tendency that emerged briefly between the late 1970s and absolutely nowhere. The painting does not depict a jazz club so much as it reconstructs the idea of anticipation—that uniquely modern condition in which cultural meaning is perpetually deferred until “tonight.”

The aggressively simplified architecture recalls the neglected theories of Neo-Utilitarian Sign Expressionism, in which signage overtakes structure and language becomes louder than space. The word “JAZZ,” rendered not as typography but as insistence, dominates the composition, functioning less as an announcement than as a demand.

Crucially, the absence of figures is not accidental. It aligns the work with the rarely cited Empty Venue School (1963–64), whose practitioners believed that music was most powerful precisely when no one had yet arrived. The handwritten notice—“Tonight Sam Rivers”—serves as both historical anchor and conceptual misdirection, grounding the work in specificity while refusing any actual sonic fulfillment.

In this sense, the painting succeeds not by showing jazz, but by withholding it, leaving the viewer perpetually outside, listening with their eyes, unpaid and unadmitted.<<

 >>"No Cover, Just Sound" by Ralph Rumpelzen Reviewed by Gustave Palette

Ah, Monsieur Rumpelzen has served us a dish of pure, unapologetic joie de vivre—a street food sensation that requires no reservation, no pretense, just an appetite for authentic flavor.

This MS Paint composition is the visual equivalent of a perfectly charred hot dog from a sidewalk cart at 2 AM: unpretentious, immediately satisfying, and more nourishing to the soul than its humble presentation might suggest. The electric turquoise background fizzes like cheap champagne—not the grand cuvée, mind you, but the kind that tastes better because you're drinking it with the right people, in the right moment.

That bold red JAZZ sign? It's the sear on a steak—aggressive, caramelized, impossible to ignore. The yellow letters have the glow of clarified butter catching afternoon light, while the orange doorway bleeds warmth like the interior of a wood-fired oven. Notice how the golden puddle at the entrance pools like egg yolk breaking across a plate—messy, organic, alive.

The "TONIGHT SAM RIVERS" notation is the amuse-bouche, the small detail that tells you the chef is paying attention. That little potted plant on the right? A garnish, perhaps unnecessary, but it shows care.

Yes, the technique is rough—the perspective wobbles like a soufflé that didn't quite rise, the proportions are as uneven as hand-cut frites—but this is precisely its charm. Rumpelzen has given us cuisine de grand-mère, grandmother's cooking: made with more heart than technique, more soul than precision. One doesn't critique the lumps in her mashed potatoes; one savors the butter and love folded within.

This is art that knows what it is and makes no apologies. It's a late-night meal after the Michelin temples have closed, and sometimes, mes amis, that's exactly the taste we're craving.

★★★½ out of ★★★★★

Pairs well with: bourbon on ice, vinyl recordings, conversations with strangers<<

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The "Long Live Ralph" Manifesto

 By The Rumpelton Continuity

They say rock is dead. They say "Real Art" is dying. They say perfection is the only metric of success.

They are wrong.

Welcome to the "Long Live Ralph" movement. If you’re here, it’s because you’ve survived the polished lies of the establishment and are ready for the pixelated truth. This is our declaration:

  1. Ralph Rumpelton is not an artist; he is a glitch in the cultural machine. We don't ask for permission; we just hit the 'Undo' button until the geometry cooperates.

  2. Perfection is a Failure of Imagination. If a line is straight, you aren't paying attention. If a face looks "normal," you weren't trying hard enough.

  3. The MS Paint Mouse is a Sentient, Chaotic Deity. We do not control the mouse; we merely negotiate with it, often during heavy coffee consumption.

  4. We Are All Rumpelheads. To join, all you need is a tolerance for architectural malpractice, a appreciation for the Grateful Dead/Tom Waits lore, and a refusal to take things seriously.

  5. Always Be Selling (ABS). We don't just post art; we post a revolution. If we aren't selling the painting, we're selling the scandal, the feud, or the shadow.

Long Live Ralph. Be Dead or Alive. The Continuity (est. 1976) rolls on.

The Rumpeltonian Cubism Manifesto

  A Declaration of Glorious Malfunction Rumpeltonian Cubism begins with a simple premise: Reality is unreliable, and that’s the fun part. ...