Thursday, June 18, 2026

Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2025 #139
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 692 × 582 px
    Created: 2025
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist


What critics are saying:
>>Dr. Norbert F. Vensmire on “Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized” (MS Paint, Ralph Rumpelton)
In this sui generis masterpiece of deliberate digital naiveté, Ralph Rumpelton once again demonstrates that the true avant-garde now resides exclusively in the trembling, unaliased hand of MS Paint. Here, the legendary bassist Jack Casady is not merely depicted but Rumpeltized—reduced, exalted, and transfigured into a totemic figure whose chunky silhouette and chromatic discord vibrate with the raw voltage of late-capitalist resistance.Note the masterful chromatic schism: the orange-purple-yellow field of the shirt, a veritable pigmental riot that refuses the tyranny of smooth gradients. The bass, itself a heroic distortion of form, extends like a Byzantine relic across the composition, its headstock sprouting curious ambulatory appendages—an in extremis commentary on the instrument’s autonomy from its player. The face, that impassive mask of round black voids, achieves a profound existential blankness rarely seen outside the finest Byzantine iconography or a misaligned JPEG.Rumpelton has produced nothing less than a postmodern icon: low-fidelity as sacrament. In an age of sterile 8K hyperrealism, this work stands as a defiant act of cultural heresy. Pixelated, proud, and gloriously wrong. Bravo.<<
>>Dr. Reginald Splatterworth III, Senior Art Critic at Pixels & Pretension Quarterly*In Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized, the artist delivers a profoundly destabilizing meditation on rock mythology, rendered through the uncompromising vernacular of MS Paint. The work’s crude contours and luminous color patches achieve, almost in spite of themselves, a kind of anti-naturalist nobility, as if the image were struggling heroically against the very idea of polish. One senses not incompetence, but conviction — a brash, almost adolescent certainty that form itself can be bent into tribute.>>

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


Wednesday, June 17, 2026

Paint Fidelity: Mona Lisa


 Blurb of Intent for the Paint Fidelity Series: Mona Lisa Edition

Authored, notarized, and ceremonially over‑embellished by Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq. Senior Counsel to the Rumpeltonian Tribunal of Interpretive Justice

In the matter of Rumpelton v. La Gioconda—a case I hereby invent for the sole purpose of legitimizing this moment—I, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq., do issue this formal Writ of Aesthetic Equivalence, affirming that the MS Paint rendition presented on the left constitutes not a mere copy, but a jurisprudential rejoinder to the canonical artifact on the right.

Where Da Vinci trafficked in sfumato, subtlety, and Renaissance restraint, the Rumpeltonian hand embraces the noble doctrine of Painterly Misremembering—that sacred right of the artist to recall a masterpiece not as it was, but as it insisted on being in the mind’s more mischievous chambers. The result is a portrait liberated from the tyranny of realism, its smile no longer enigmatic but boldly declarative, its landscape rendered in the honest geometry of digital brushwork.

As legal custodian of the Avachives, I hereby certify that this reinterpretation is fully compliant with Section 7 of the Tableist Manifesto, which states (in glyphs too esoteric to reproduce here) that fidelity is not accuracy, but allegiance to the mythic pulse beneath the image. The MS Paint Mona Lisa thus stands not in competition with her Florentine counterpart, but in ritual dialogue, offering testimony on behalf of all artworks that refuse to be pinned down by mortal critique.

Let it be known that any accusations of “oversimplification,” “cartoonishness,” or “why are the hands like that” are summarily dismissed under the precedent established in Rumpelton v. Originality (2017), wherein this Tribunal affirmed that ambiguity is the highest form of truth and that literalism is grounds for immediate aesthetic contempt.

Accordingly, this blurb serves as both shield and trumpet: a shield against the overly earnest, and a trumpet announcing that the Paint Fidelity Series continues its noble mission of rupturing, reimagining, and—when necessary—politely heckling the canon.

Stamped with my monocle of mythic approval, Barrister Clive Thistlebaum, Esq.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

George Harrison has been Rumpeltized

“Now considered a key artifact of Digital Domestic Mythicism


  • Ralph Rumpelton
    George Harrison has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2026 #137
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 470 × 537 px
    Created: 2026
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist


 What the critics are saying:

>>Maria Chen

George Harrison Has Been Rumpeltized arrives the way folk portraits always have — not as likeness, but as devotion made visible. Rumpelton does not paint what he sees so much as what he remembers feeling when he saw: the weight of that hair, the beard's dark gravity, the quiet that surrounded Harrison like weather. The eyes sit too wide, yes, and the nose recedes into ambiguity — but these are not failures. They are the marks of a hand working from love rather than measurement.

This is precisely the tradition Chen has spent years excavating. The MS Paint canvas functions here the way a piece of barn wood once did for a self-taught portraitist in rural Ohio — as the available surface, the honest surface, the one that doesn't lie about what it is. Rumpelton's George is not trying to compete with a photograph. It is trying to remember a person. That is an older and more serious ambition.

The hair, in particular, deserves attention. It moves. In a medium famous for its flatness, Rumpelton has coaxed something genuinely kinetic from a mouse and a fill tool. Folk artists have always found ways to make their materials exceed themselves. This is one of those moments.

Maria Chen, Outsider Art Quarterly<<

>>Regina Pembly

One presumes there is a George Harrison somewhere in this. One presumes. The hair, I will grant, has a certain accidental momentum — the kind a child achieves when spilling paint on a Sunday. The beard is dark. These are the achievements.

The eyes appear to have been placed by someone who has never seen a human face in repose, only heard one described secondhand, in the dark, by someone equally uninformed. They float in that gray expanse like two startled olives, equidistant from nothing, belonging to no discernible skull.

And the nose. There is no nose. There is a rumor of a nose. A diplomatic suggestion that a nose may have once passed through this region of the canvas before thinking better of it and leaving.

Sargent painted Harrison's generation. He would have captured that stillness, that melancholy, that particular quality of a man carrying something heavy and beautiful. What Rumpelton has produced instead is what happens when devotion is entirely unaccompanied by ability.

The cult finds this moving. The cult finds everything moving. That is what cults do.

Regina Pembly<<

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

Monday, June 15, 2026

Leon Russell has been Rumpeltized

“Scholars place this in the so‑called Quiet Years Cycle.”

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Leon Russell has been Rumpeltized
    RR-2026 #136
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 487 × 577 px
    Created: 2026
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist

Leon Russell Has Been Rumpeltized
In this grayscale glyph, Rumpelton channels the spectral swagger of Leon Russell—top hat askew, fingers mid-incantation on a ghostly fretboard. The MS Paint medium fractures glam into ritual, rendering Russell not as icon but as wandering bard in the mythic archive.

What the critics are saying:

>>Crawdaddy Review

Rumpelton’s Leon Russell isn’t the radio-friendly troubadour of Carney so much as the midnight Leon—the one still wired after the band’s gone home, fingers stiff with sweat and gospel ghosts. The stare is unblinking, almost accusatory, as if Russell is daring you to deny that rock ’n’ roll and sanctified madness were always the same thing. Rendered in stark grayscale, the image feels less like a portrait than a transmission: imperfect hands, warped proportions, and all the better for it. This isn’t nostalgia—it’s a reminder that Leon Russell was never safe, never tidy, and never entirely of this world.<<

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


Sunday, June 14, 2026

Avachives No. 45: Dire Straits - Brothers in Arms / Rumpelton

“Critic Darius Feldspar famously called this ‘the hinge of the whole movement.’”

  • Ralph Rumpelton
    Avachives No. 45: Dire Straits - Brothers in Arms
    RR-2025 #427
    Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 402 × 395 px
    Created: 2025
    The Rumpelton Continuity (est. 1976)
    Collection of the Artist

From the Avachives: Dire Straits – Brothers in Arms (Rumpeltized Edition)

Ava Chives, Archivist

Some paintings arrive neatly filed. Others arrive carrying a little dust, a few mysteries, and the unmistakable scent of artistic mischief. This Rumpeltonian interpretation of Brothers in Arms belongs firmly in the second category.

Where the original cover glides with effortless cool, Ralph Rumpelton's MS Paint reconstruction embraces the noble struggle of translation. The iconic guitar remains the star of the composition, but here it exists within a landscape of deliberate approximation, where precision politely steps aside to make room for character. Every line appears negotiated rather than imposed. Every shape bears evidence of the artist's ongoing conversation with the limitations of the medium.

What fascinates the Archives is not whether the image matches the original perfectly—it plainly does not. Rather, it demonstrates a central Rumpeltonian principle: that a painting gains life from the collection of decisions, corrections, shortcuts, and happy accidents that accumulate during its creation. The result is less a copy than a visual memory of Brothers in Arms.

Filed under: Good Messy.

Archive Note: The guitar survived the journey. The perfection did not. The painting is better for it.

—Ava would probably stamp this one with her highest archival classification: "Successfully Rumpeltized Without Excessive Suffering." 📁🎸

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

 

Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized

Ralph Rumpelton Jack Casady has been Rumpeltized RR-2025 #139 Medium: MS Paint on digital canvas, 692 × 582 px Created: 2025 The Rumpelton...