Roerich, was: transgression?

Luis Gonzalez-Reimann reimann at UCLINK.BERKELEY.EDU
Fri Jan 30 04:44:16 UTC 1998


The Nicholas Roerich Museum is in New York:

319 West 107th St.
New York, NY 10025-2799
tel. (212) 864-7752
fax:  (212) 864-7704

The following book is informative and has many illustrations:

Decter, Jacqueline, and the Nicholas Roerich Museum. 1989. Nicholas Roerich:
The Life and Art of a Russian Master. Rochester: Park Street Press.

Not much help with George Roerich, though.  Both Roerichs (father and son)
published several books.  Among George Roerich's:

 Roerich, George.
      Trails to inmost Asia; five years of exploration with the Roerich central
    Asian expedition, by George N. Roerich; with a preface by Louis Marin.  New
    Haven, Yale university press; London, H. Milford, Oxford university press,
    1931.

Luis Gonzalez-Reimann
University of California, Berkeley


At 06:25 PM 1/29/98 -0200, you wrote:
>-----
>>        Then the Classical Indology was revived in the late 50-ies -
>>by George N. Roerich, who had returned from India to Moscow.
>
>
>>>>>>>>>>
>
>George N. Roerich son of Yuri Nicolai Roerich, this one an aristocrat,
>painter, mystic and Tibetologist who was an enigma to British colonial
>administration in the beginning of this century while he was living in
>Tibet.
>I think there is museum with his name in the U.S and also a house in the
>centre of Moscow with the inscription that there lived George Roerich.
>
>Jesualdo Correia
>
>
>
>





More information about the INDOLOGY mailing list