Acrylic Paint vs Oil Paint: Why I Choose Speed, Versatility, and Innovation

April 7, 2025

Close-up of acrylic and oil paint tubes on a studio table

When it comes to painting, two mediums tend to dominate the conversation: acrylic and oil.

Over the years, I’ve explored both, but I keep returning to acrylic.

Not out of habit — but because it suits the way I work.

Speed, flexibility, and the ability to adapt quickly all play a role in how my paintings develop, and acrylic allows that to happen without resistance.


Understanding the Difference

Before getting into preference, it’s worth breaking down the key differences.

Drying time
Acrylic dries quickly — often within minutes or hours. Oil can take days, sometimes weeks.

Texture and finish
Oil has a naturally rich, glossy quality. Acrylic can mimic that, but also offers a wider range of finishes.

Clean-up
Acrylic is water-based. Oil requires solvents.

Longevity
Oil has history on its side. Acrylic, while newer, has proven to be stable and durable.

Toxicity
Acrylic is generally low-risk. Oils often involve harsher materials.


Acrylic vs Oil paint: Why Acrylic Fits the Way I Work

For me, the decision comes down to process.

The work I create — particularly my abstract portrait paintings — relies on momentum. Layers build quickly, decisions are made instinctively, and things often shift mid-way through.

That kind of approach doesn’t sit well with long drying times.

Acrylic allows me to move at the same pace as the ideas.

Some of the pieces that come out of this process can be seen across my available work, where that layering and immediacy becomes part of the final result within the paintings themselves.


Speed and Responsiveness

The fast drying time isn’t just convenient — it changes how you think.

You can:

  • layer quickly
  • adjust immediately
  • revisit areas without delay

There’s no waiting for the paint to “catch up” with you.

That keeps the process fluid.


A Medium That Has Evolved

Acrylic today is very different to what it once was.

There are now:

  • slow-drying variants
  • heavy body paints
  • fluid acrylics
  • a wide range of mediums to adjust finish and texture

That flexibility makes it incredibly adaptable.

Whether I want something flat and controlled or textured and expressive, it’s all achievable within the same medium.


The Perception Problem

There’s still a lingering idea that oil is the “serious” medium.

That acrylic somehow sits a step below.

It’s outdated.

Yes, oil has history. But that doesn’t make it inherently better — just older.

Many contemporary artists have used acrylic to produce significant, widely recognised work. The medium has more than proven itself.

And ultimately, the value of a painting isn’t determined by what it’s made with.

It’s determined by what it communicates.


Health and Environment

There’s also a practical side to it.

Working with oils often involves solvents — something that changes the working environment completely.

Acrylic removes that.

No fumes. No specialist ventilation. No complicated clean-up.

That simplicity matters, especially when painting regularly or for long periods.


Longevity and Durability

Acrylic may not have the same historical track record as oil, but it’s no longer an unknown.

Modern testing has shown that it holds up extremely well over time.

It doesn’t yellow in the same way. It remains flexible. It resists cracking.

With the right materials and preparation, there’s no reason it won’t last.


Freedom to Experiment

More than anything, acrylic gives me room to explore.

It allows for:

  • mixed media
  • layering
  • quick adjustments
  • reworking without hesitation

That freedom feeds directly into how the work develops.

And it’s something that continues to shape both my process and the direction the work takes over time — something you can also see across the exhibitions I’ve been part of through my exhibition work.


Where It Lands

The question of acrylic vs oil often comes down to preference.

But for the way I work, acrylic makes sense.

It removes friction from the process.

It keeps things moving.

And it allows the work to evolve naturally, without waiting for the medium to catch up.

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