

Nicholas Roerich Museum
319 West 107th Street
New York NY 10025
The Museum is on 107th street, between Broadway & Riverside Drive closer to Riverside Drive.
Subway:, #1 train to 110th Street and Broadway.
Bus: M104 bus to 108th Street and Broadway; M5 bus to 108th Street and Riverside Drive
Car: The Museum does not provide for parking, which can be found on nearby streets. Parking garages can be found on 108th Street, east of Broadway.
Tuesday–Sunday, noon–4 p.m.
Closed Monday.
Also closed New Years’ Day, Easter Sunday, July 4, Thanksgiving Day, and Christmas Day.
Admission is free, though donations are welcome.
If you will need to use the elevator, we ask that you give us a call at least a day in advance. There are two flights of stairs that lead to the second and third floor galleries, so please plan your visit accordingly.
phone: 212–864–7752 (during open hours)
We are sorry to announce that our spring concert season is cancelled.
Sunday, June 24th, the Nikolai Kachanov Singers (NKS), our artists-in-residence, performed “PARALLELS AND CROSSINGS: Peace, Hope, Love and Joy,” a program of some great music of the Renaissance period, as well as music by our contemporaries. The performance took place at the historic Holyrood Episcopal Church in Washington Heights.
July 6th
An interview (in Russian) with Elena Semeka-Pankratova who was George Roerich's secretary (and later postgraduate) at the Institute of Oriental Studies (Moscow, Russia) during 1958-1960. Read here »
July 3rd
Collection catalog under "Browse table" updated ». "Browse thumbnails" will be updated shortly.
The Museum's collection comprises more than 200 paintings of the artist, exhibited on three floors of a classic townhouse in the Upper West Side of Manhattan.
1874 | Born in St.Petersburg |
1893–1898 | Studied in the Imperial Art Academy |
1906–1916 | Director of the Drawing School of Imperial Society for Encouragement of Arts. Exhibited in major European cities |
1917–1919 | Karelia, Scandinavia, London |
1920–1923 | President Founder of the Master Institute & Roerich Museum in New York, exhibitions across the U.S.A. in more than 20 cities |
1923–1928 | Expedition to Central Asia: Sikkim, Kashmir, Ladakh, Chinese Turkestan, Altai, Mongolia, crossing Tibet from North to South |
1929–1947 | Settled in Naggar, Kullu Valley, India |
1934–1935 | Expedition in Manchuria and Inner Mongolia |
1935 | The Roerich Pact signed in the White House by twenty one countries |
1947 | Passed away in Naggar |
Below: Nicholas Roerich preparing for crossing the Gobi and Tibet from north (Ulaan-Bator) to south (Sikkim). Photo taken early April of 1927
Below: Nicholas Roerich in Darjeeling, India, soon after his expedition in Central Asia. Photo taken in the Fall of 1928
Our archive holds tens of thousands of items of correspondence pertaining to Nicholas Roerich's artistic and other activities.
A visionary and idealist, Roerich promoted peace and the protection of the world's cultural heritage, the unity of religions, and the notion that the creative people of the world bear the responsibility to save the world.
During the nineteen-twenties, he composed a treaty for protection of the historic monuments, museums, scientific, artistic, educational and cultural institutions in time of peace as well as in war.
Nowadays the Roerich Pact movement is especially popular in Latin America—check banderadelapaz.org and watch the video.
Prints » Large size prints » Books »
JAMES WARD, UNITED STATES:
January, 2012
What a treasure the Roerich Museum is! A wonderfully immersive experience to be surrounded by his art and artifacts in such relaxed, inviting and densely adorned surroundings.