In 1962, he acquired his Post Diploma in Painting under the teaching of N. S. Bendre. As an extra subject, he studied woodcut in graphics. Later on, he also learned etching and colorography.
He was a temporary lecturer in the faculty of fine arts M.S. University in 1970 for the painting department and in 1980 for the graphics department for one year short duration each time. He also had more than 74 one-man shows.[5]
Works
He participated in national and international art exhibitions including the Third Triennale–India.[6]
Parikh started his work initially as abstract: he practised Cubism for one year. For this short duration of time, he was influenced by the art of Pablo Picasso. Later, after 1970, he created his own style of painting, calling it Rhythm. Since his beginnings, his favourite subject remains Indian monuments and archaeological sites. He has always painted his art either on-site of his reference monument, or he paints a sketch and from that reference, he paints in his studio. Since 1970 he found the fourth dimension in his artwork which is motion, which he calls Rhythm. His art is influenced by nature, and he feels that he paints that rhythm in his painting.[17]
^"His name is listed as Baroda Group of Artists' fifth annual exhibition of paintings by". Asia Art Archive.
^"The name of Jayant Parikh's wife is published in the Gujarati Language News Paper". Divya Bhaskar Gujarati News.
^"Sahapedia mention Jayant's name as printmaking artist of Baroda". Sahapedia.
^"Jayant's name and photo displayed as fine art student of MSU by Vandana Kalra in". The Indian Express. Retrieved 6 November 2016.
^"Jayant Parikh's 74th Solo Exhibition News on VNM TV dated 16-11-2014".
^"Participated in Third Triennale-India".
^ a b"Jayant's serigraphs on paper at Christie, New York".
^"Jayant Parikh's painting at Sotheby, New York". invaluable.com.
^"Jayant's painting at Dominic Winter Auctioneers, United Kingdom".
^"Osian's Auction Catalogue ABC Series III | March 2007". assets.osianama.com.
^"National Gallery of Modern Art, New Delhi".
^"National Gallery of Modern Art, Mumbai".
^"National Gallery of Modern Art, Bengaluru".
^"Serial number 51 shows Jayant's painting". invaluable.com.
^"Jayant's dedicated page on JNAF.org".
^"Flower vase oil painting on canvas in third row fourth image at Lalit Kala Akademi's website". lalitkala.gov.in.
^"Gujarat Samachar a leading Gujarati newspaper talks about rhythm in Jayant's painting".
^ a b"Paper copy of Bronze medal at Bombay Art Society in the year 1959 and 1961". www.jayantparikh.com.
^ a b c d e f"Paper copy of 6 Kalidas Exbhibition Awards". www.jayantparikh.com.
^ a b c d e f"Paper copy of 7 Other Awards". www.jayantparikh.com.
^ a b c d e f g"Paper copy of 7 Gujarat Lalit Kala Awards". www.jayantparikh.com.
^"Paper copy of SAIGON Award". www.jayantparikh.com.
^ a b c"Paper copy of 3 Hydrabad Art Society Awards". www.jayantparikh.com.
^"Paper copy of gold medal at Germany". www.jayantparikh.com.
^ a b c"Yes Plus Gang of The Art of Living also describe this award in their news".
^ a b"Paper copy of National Award in year 1970 and 1980". www.jayantparikh.com.
^"On the Gujarat Lalit Kala Academy's website, Jitendra Thakar published his PDF file for the introduction of all artists who won Gujarat Gaurav Purashkar from the year 2000 to 2011. On page 17 he mentions Jayant Parikh's name as the 2005–06 winner" (PDF). lalitkalaacademy.gujarat.gov.in.
^"VNM TV shared Jayant's video interview on occasion of getting Raja Ravi Verma award". VNM TV. 13 May 2017.
^"Times of India TNN News on March 04, 2022". The Times of India. 4 March 2022.
^"Jayant's name is listed 39th in 45 notable alumni of the Maharaja Sayajirao University of Baroda".