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Fluid Art: How to Start Acrylic Pouring & Create Psychedelic Abstract Paintings

What is Fluid Art

Photo: Stock Photos from Jennylynn Fields/Shutterstock
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Whether you want to call it fluid art, liquid art, or acrylic pouring, there’s nothing more satisfying than creating abstract masterpieces by letting pigment run amok. This form of abstract art uses acrylics with a runny consistency to create psychedelic paintings. There are endless creative possibilities thanks to different ways to combine acrylic paints and there's something so satisfying about watching it spill across a surface.

Getting started with acrylic pouring isn’t particularly difficult, making it a great art form for all skill levels. With so many techniques to try, you can get as simple or complicated as you’d like. At its core, fluid art allows you to learn a great deal about materials and is great for experimenting with color and technique. It’s also fun for all ages!

 

Acrylic Pouring Supplies

Acrylic Pouring Supplies

DecoArt | $2.71+

 

Best Paint for Acrylic Pouring

The key to a good acrylic pour is consistency…of paint that is. You’ll want to use fluid acrylics, which have a much thinner consistency than heavy body acrylics. If you only have thicker acrylics on hand, you can still use them, but you'll want to thin them out with water.

Some people have great success by simply using craft paints (Apple Barrel and Americana are two popular brands), but if you want an artwork that is long-lasting, we suggest going with professional-grade fluid acrylics. Golden Fluid Acrylics and Liquitex Soft Body Acrylics are great choices for their strong pigments and lightfastness.

 

Pouring Mediums

While fluid acrylics have a high viscosity, you will still want to add something to create the consistency you are after. What you will add depends on whether you are doing a coated pour, where the finished product has bold, even layers of color, or a wash pour, where the finished product almost looks like layers of watercolor.

To get the viscosity and pouring rate you’d like, you can first adjust with water. Fluid acrylics won’t need much—if any—to be added; and for a coated pour, only a small amount in a 1:10 ratio should be added. Adding more water will also change how well the paint adheres to your surface, so try not to go above a 1:1 ratio, which is what is recommended for wash pours. By experimenting and changing things up, you’ll discover all types of fun effects.

Acrylic Pouring Medium

Liquitex | $31.89

Beyond water, a good pouring medium is key. Liquitex Professional Pouring Medium is a popular choice for its ability to create even sheets and puddles while promoting drying. GAC 800 is another quality pouring medium, as it helps prevent fissures from appearing. Known as crazing, the fissures appear due to uneven drying times between lower and top levels. One downside of GAC 800 is that it can become slightly cloudy when dry, so it isn’t great to use as a clear topcoat. If you are looking to get started without investing too much, Floetrol is another pouring medium that is effective without breaking the bank.

Isopropyl alcohol can also be added to pours to create interesting circular cells, which occur when the fast-drying alcohol tries to escape. A ratio of 2 parts pouring medium to one part acrylic and one part isopropyl alcohol will give great results.

There are also quite a number of people who use glue, silicon, and oils ranging from motor oil to coconut oil to either create cells or serve as pouring mediums. All can yield interesting results but may diminish the longevity of your painting as they can change the properties of the paint.

Acrylic Pouring

Photo: Stock Photos from Jennylynn Fields/Shutterstock

 

Supplies to Start Pouring Paint

Many people start out using canvases for their fluid art. To get the best results, try preparing your canvas with a layer of gesso so that it will hold the weight of the paint better. As canvas can buckle a bit under too much weight, causing the surface to become uneven, prepared artist panels are often the safest choice.

Clear Pouring Topcoat

DecoArt | $10.88+

Another essential of liquid art is keeping your space clean! Obviously, this is an art form that can get messy, so plastic sheets to keep your table or floor from getting colorful is critical. Other must-haves include clear plastic cups, squeeze bottles, and wood stirrers. Palette knives will help you spread and even paint toward the edges and a heat torch can remove bubbles and bring cells out in specific areas. You’ll also want a nice clear topcoat to seal off your work once it’s finished.

 

Acrylic Pouring Techniques

Experimentation is key, but two basic techniques for pouring paint will get you started on a journey to creating your own psychedelic masterpiece—straight pouring and dirty pouring. We’ll dive deeper into what each of these methods entails, but whichever technique you choose, you’ll want to make sure you’re working on a level surface to ensure you get the best results possible, both while pouring and when leaving the painting to dry.

 

Straight Pour

Dirt Pour Art

Photo: Priscilia Salinas via Shutterstock

A straight pour is simply when you individually add color to your surface, building up layers as you go. One method involves pouring “puddles” of individual colors that are then manipulated to move across the surface as the canvas is tilted at different angles. Straight pours can provide nice, crisp color lines when doing a coated pour or feathery effects when creating a wash pour. You can also swipe them with all types of instruments to create different effects.

 

Dirty Pour

Acrylic Pouring

Photo: Jennylynn Fields via Shutterstock

With the dirty pour technique, all your paints are placed into one cup prior to being poured across the panel or canvas. Consistency is key here—if the paints are too runny they will blend together in the cup and come out muddy. This technique won’t work well for wash pours, where the colors are quite thin. Dirty pours are great because they’re so instinctive and you never know what will come out of the cup. Once you get a feel for the densities you can create with different colors, you’ll see that anything is possible.

To get even more spontaneous, try a flip cup or a funnel pour. With a flip cup, you’ll want to place your canvas on the top of your vessel once it’s filled with color. Flip the entire thing upside down and then slowly lift the cup, allowing the colors to spill over the surface. To do a funnel pour, block the pouring end of the funnel while you fill it with paint. Once you are ready, position the funnel over your canvas or panel and let the paint drizzle from the funnel as you move it around.

 

Swipe

To perform the acrylic swipe technique, you can apply your choice of paint or paints and silicone directly onto the canvas. Then you swipe across the canvas with a tool, which can be a damp cloth, a piece of cling wrap, painting knives, or spatulas. This will create a striking cell formation on the canvas, in which the different colors naturally separate themselves into cell-like shapes. This technique can also be used in conjunction with other acrylic pouring techniques.

 

Dutch Pour

 

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In the Dutch technique (also called the air swipe technique), you apply your colors of choice directly onto the canvas. Then, you use a hairdryer or other device to blow the paint across the canvas. This helps you create mesmerizing patterns and effects in a relatively short amount of time.

 

Looking to get more advanced learning?

Rick Cheadle’s Fluid Art Recipes and Art Journal is filled with over 100 pouring recipes to take your art even further and YouTube is filled with tutorials from knowledgeable experts like Nicky James Burch from Fluid Art Studios and Gina DeLuca

 

Get inspired to try acrylic pouring by watching these mesmerizing videos of artists in action.

 

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A post shared by Jenelle Elizabeth (@seabreezeave) on

 

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A post shared by Kelly Johnson (@kellyybellyy62) on

 

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A post shared by Evgenia • Artist • Toronto (@evg.studio) on

 

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A post shared by Sophie Tea (@sophieteaart)

This article has been edited and updated.

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Jessica Stewart

Jessica Stewart is a Contributing Writer and Digital Media Specialist for My Modern Met, as well as a curator and art historian. Since 2020, she is also one of the co-hosts of the My Modern Met Top Artist Podcast. She earned her MA in Renaissance Studies from University College London and now lives in Rome, Italy. She cultivated expertise in street art which led to the purchase of her photographic archive by the Treccani Italian Encyclopedia in 2014. When she’s not spending time with her three dogs, she also manages the studio of a successful street artist. In 2013, she authored the book 'Street Art Stories Roma' and most recently contributed to 'Crossroads: A Glimpse Into the Life of Alice Pasquini'. You can follow her adventures online at @romephotoblog.
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