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Nicholas Roerich

Nicholas Roerich (/ˈrɛrɪk/; October 9, 1874 – December 13, 1947), also known as Nikolai Konstantinovich Rerikh[a] (Russian: Никола́й Константи́нович Ре́рих), was a Russian painter, writer, archaeologist, theosophist, philosopher, and public figure. In his youth he was influenced by Russian Symbolism, a movement in Russian society centered on the spiritual. He was interested in hypnosis and other spiritual practices and his paintings are said to have hypnotic expression.[1][2]

Nicholas Roerich
Born(1874-10-09)October 9, 1874
DiedDecember 13, 1947(1947-12-13) (aged 73)
NationalityRussian
Occupation(s)painter, archaeologist, costume and set designer for ballets, operas, and dramas
SpouseHelena Roerich
ChildrenGeorge de Roerich,
Svetoslav Roerich
Signature

Born in Saint Petersburg, to a well-to-do Baltic German father and to a Russian mother,[3] Roerich lived in various places in the world until his death in Naggar,[4] Himachal Pradesh, India. Trained as an artist and a lawyer, his main interests were literature, philosophy, archaeology, and especially art. Roerich was a dedicated activist for the cause of preserving art and architecture during times of war. He was nominated several times to the longlist for the Nobel Peace Prize.[5] The so-called Roerich Pact (for the protection of cultural objects) was signed into law by the United States and most other nations of the Pan-American Union in April 1935.

Biography

Early life

 
Guests from Overseas, 1901 (Varangians in Rus')

Raised in late-19th-century St. Petersburg, Roerich enrolled simultaneously at St. Petersburg University and the Imperial Academy of Arts in 1893. He received the title of "artist" in 1897 and a degree in law the next year. He found early employment with the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts, whose school he directed from 1906 to 1917. Despite early tensions with the group, he became a member of Sergei Diaghilev's "World of Art" society and was its president from 1910 to 1916.

Artistically, Roerich became known as his generation's most talented painter of Russia's ancient past, a topic that was compatible with his lifelong interest in archeology. He also succeeded as a stage designer by achieving his greatest fame as one of the designers for Diaghilev's Ballets Russes. His best-known designs were for Alexander Borodin's Prince Igor (1909 and later productions),[6] and costumes and set for The Rite of Spring (1913),[7][8] composed by Igor Stravinsky.

Along with Mikhail Vrubel and Mikhail Nesterov, Roerich is considered a major representative of Russian Symbolism in art.[9] From an early period of his life, he was influenced by apocrypha and medieval sectarian writings such as the mysterious Dove Book.[10]

Another of Roerich's artistic subjects was architecture. His acclaimed publication "Architectural Studies" (1904–1905), consisting of dozens of paintings he made of fortresses, monasteries, churches, and other monuments during two long trips through Russia, inspired his decades-long career as an activist on behalf of artistic and architectural preservation. He also designed religious art for places of worship throughout Russia and Ukraine, most notably the Queen of Heaven fresco for the Church of the Holy Spirit, which the patroness Maria Tenisheva built near her Talashkino estate, and the stained glass windows for the Datsan Gunzechoinei in 1913–1915. His designs for the Talashkino church were so radical that the Orthodox church refused to consecrate the building.[9]

During the first decade of the 1900s and in the early 1910s, Roerich, largely by the influence of his wife, Helena, developed an interest in eastern religions, as well as alternative belief systems such as Theosophy. Both Roerichs became avid readers of the Vedantist essays of Ramakrishna and Vivekananda, the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore, and the Bhagavad Gita.

The Roerichs' commitment to occult mysticism increased steadily. It was especially intense during World War I and the 1917 Russian Revolution to which the couple, like other many Russian intellectuals, accorded apocalyptic significance.[11] The influence of Theosophy, Vedanta, Buddhism, and other mystical topics can be detected not only in many of Roerich's paintings but also in the many short stories and poems that Roerich wrote before and after the 1917 revolutions, including the Flowers of Morya cycle, which was begun in 1907 and completed in 1921.

Revolution and emigration to United States

 
Nicholas Roerich by Kustodiev. 1913

After the February Revolution of 1917 and the end of the czarist regime, Roerich, a political moderate who valued Russia's cultural heritage more than ideology and party politics, had an active part in artistic politics. With Maxim Gorky and Aleksandr Benois, he participated with the so-called "Gorky Commission" and its successor organization, the Arts Union (SDI). Both attempted to gain the attention of the Provisional Government and Petrograd Soviet on the need to form a coherent cultural policy and, most urgently, to protect art and architecture from destruction and vandalism.

Meanwhile, illness forced Roerich to leave the capital and reside in Karelia, the district bordering Finland. He had already quit the presidency of the World of Art society, and he now quit the directorship of the School of the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts. After the October Revolution and the acquisition of power of Lenin's Bolshevik Party, Roerich became increasingly discouraged about Russia's political future. During early 1918, he, Helena, and their two sons George and Svetoslav emigrated to Finland.

Two unresolved historical debates are associated with Roerich's departure. First, it is often claimed that Roerich was a major candidate to direct a people's commissariat of culture (the Soviet equivalent of a ministry of culture), which the Bolsheviks considered establishing in 1917–1918, but he refused to accept the job. In fact, Benois was the most likely choice to direct any such commissariat. It seems that Roerich was a preferred choice to manage its department of artistic education; the topic is rendered moot by the fact that the Soviets elected not to establish such a commissariat.

Second, when Roerich later wished to reconcile with the Soviet Union, he maintained that he had not left Soviet Russia deliberately, but that he and his family, living in Karelia, had been isolated from their homeland when the Finnish Civil War began. However, Roerich had an amply-documented extreme hostility to the Bolshevik regime, prompted not so much by a dislike of communism as by his revulsion at Lenin's ruthlessness and his fear that Bolshevism would result in the destruction of Russia's artistic and architectural heritage. He illustrated Leonid Andreyev's anticommunist polemic "S.O.S." and had a widely-published pamphlet, "Violators of Art" (1918–1919). Roerich believed that "the triumph of Russian culture would come about through a new appreciation of ancient myth and legend."[12]

After some months in Finland and Scandinavia, the Roerichs relocated to London, arriving in mid-1919. Engrossed with Theosophical mysticism, they now had millenarian expectations that a new age was imminent, and they wished to travel to India as soon as possible. They joined the English-Welsh chapter of the Theosophical Society. It was in London, in March 1920, that the Roerichs founded their own school of mysticism, Agni Yoga,[13] which they described as "the system of living ethics."

To earn passage to India, Roerich worked as a stage designer for Thomas Beecham's Covent Garden Theatre, but the enterprise ended unsuccessfully in 1920, and the artist never received full payment for his work. Among the notable people Roerich befriended while in England were the famed British Buddhist Christmas Humphreys, the philosopher-author H. G. Wells, and the poet and Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore (whose grand-niece Devika Rani would later marry Roerich's son Svetoslav).

A successful exhibition in London resulted in an invitation from a director at the Art Institute of Chicago, offering to arrange for Roerich's art to tour the United States. In the autumn of 1920, the Roerichs traveled to America by sea.

 
Car of Nicolas Roerich in his museum at Naggar

The Roerichs remained in the United States from October 1920 until May 1923. A large exhibition of Roerich's art, organized partly by the U.S. impresario Christian Brinton and partly by the Chicago Art Institute, began in New York in December 1920 and toured the country, to San Francisco and back, in 1921 and early 1922. Roerich befriended acclaimed soprano Mary Garden of the Chicago Opera and received a commission to design a 1922 production of Rimsky-Korsakov's The Snow Maiden for her. During the exhibition, the Roerichs spent significant amounts of time in Chicago, New Mexico, and California.

Politically, Roerich was at first anti-Bolshevik. He gave lectures and wrote articles to White Russian populations in which he criticized the Soviet Union. However, his aversion to communism, "the impertinent monster that lies to humanity," changed in America. Roerich claimed that his spiritual masters, the "Mahatmas" in the Himalayas, were communicating telepathically with him through his wife, Helena, who was a mystic and a clairvoyant.

The beings from an esoteric Buddhist community in India were said to have told Roerich that Russia was destined for a mission on Earth. That led him to formulate his "Great Plan," which envisaged the unification of millions of Asian peoples through a religious movement using the Future Buddha, or Maitreya, into a "Second Union of the East." There, the King of Shambhala would, following the Maitreya prophecies, make his appearance to fight a great battle against all evil forces on Earth. Roerich understood that as "perfection towards Common Good." The new polity was to include southwestern Altai, Tuva, Buryatia, Outer and Inner Mongolia, Xinjiang and Tibet, with its capital in "Zvenigorod," the "City of Tolling Bells," which was to be built at the foot of Mount Belukha, in Altai. According to Roerich, the same Mahatmas revealed to him in 1922 that he was an incarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama.[14]

Roerichs' collaboration with Bolshevik diplomats and aim to gather intelligence on the British, led several scholars to place Nicholas Roerich as a participant in the British-Russian colonial Great Game.[15][16][17][18]

In 1923, Roerich, the "practical idealist," set out to the Himalayas with his wife and his son Yuri. Roerich initially settled in Darjeeling in the same house that the 13th Dalai Lama had stayed during his exile in India. Roerich spent his time painting the Himalayas with visitors such as Frederick Marshman Bailey, Lady Lytton, and members of the 1924 British Everest Expedition, as well as Sonam Wangfel Laden La, Kusho Doring, and Tsarong Shape, influential Tibetans. According to British intelligence, lamas from the Moru monastery recognized Roerich as the incarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama due to a mole pattern on his right cheek. It was during his stay in the Himalayas that Roerich learned about the flight of the 9th Panchen Lama, which he interpreted as the fulfillment of the Matreiya prophecies and the bringing about of the Age of Shambhala.[19]

In 1924, the Roerichs returned to the West. On his way to America, Roerich stopped at the Soviet embassy in Berlin, where he told the local plenipotentiary about a Central Asian expedition he wanted to take. He asked for Soviet protection on his way, and shared his impressions of politics in India and Tibet. Roerich commented on the "occupation of Tibet by the British" by claiming that they "infiltrate in small parties... conduct extensive anti-Soviet propaganda" by talking about "anti-religious activity of the Bolsheviks." The plenipotentiary later pointed out to one of Roerich's old university classmates, Georgy Chicherin, that he had "absolutely pro-Soviet leanings, which looked somewhat Buddho-Communistic," and that his son, who spoke 28 Asian languages, helped him in gaining the favor with the Indians and the Tibetans.[20]

The Roerichs settled in New York City, which became the base of their many American operations. They founded several institutions during these years: Cor Ardens ("Flaming Heart") and Corona Mundi ("Crown of the World"), both of which were meant to unite artists around the globe in the cause of civic activism; the Master Institute of United Arts, an art school with a versatile curriculum, and the eventual home of the first Nicholas Roerich Museum; and an American Agni Yoga Society. They also joined various theosophical societies; their activities with these groups dominated their lives.

Asian expedition (1925–1929)

 
Roerich's family (Kullu valley, India)

After leaving New York, the Roerichs, together with their son George and six friends began the five-year Roerich Asian Expedition that in Roerich's own words "started from Sikkim through Punjab, Kashmir, Ladakh, the Karakoram Mountains, Khotan, Kashgar, Qara Shar, Urumchi, Irtysh, the Altai Mountains, the Oyrot region of Mongolia, the Central Gobi, Kansu, Tsaidam, and Tibet" with a detour through Siberia to Moscow in 1926.

The Roerichs' Asian expedition attracted attention from the foreign services and intelligence agencies of the Soviet Union, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Japan. In fact, prior to this expedition, Roerich had solicited the help of the Soviet government and Bolshevik secret police to assist him in his expedition by promising in return to monitor British activities in the area, but he received only a lukewarm response from Mikhail Trilisser, the chief of the Soviet foreign intelligence.

The Bolsheviks assisted Roerich with logistics while he was traveling through Siberia and Mongolia. However, they did not commit themselves to his reckless project of the Sacred Union of the East, a spiritual utopia that boiled down to Roerich's ambitious attempts to stir the Buddhist masses of inner Asia to create a highly spiritual co-operative commonwealth under the patronage of Bolshevik Russia.

The official mission of his expedition, as Roerich put it, was to act as the embassy of Western Buddhism to Tibet. To the Western media, it was presented as an artistic and scientific enterprise.[21] Roerich reported seeing a metallic oval in the sky over the Tibet; Decades later, UFO enthusiasts would claim the Roerich expedition witnessed a "flying saucer".[22][23]

Between the summer of 1927 and June 1928, the expedition was thought to have been lost, as communication with them had ceased. They had, in fact, been attacked in Tibet. Roerich wrote that only the "superiority of our firearms prevented bloodshed.... In spite of our having Tibet passports, the expedition was forcibly stopped by Tibetan authorities." They were detained by the government for five months and were forced to live in tents in sub-zero conditions and to subsist on meagre rations. Five men of the expedition died during this time. In March 1928 they were allowed to leave Tibet, and they trekked south to settle in India, where they founded a research center, the Himalayan Research Institute.

In 1929 Roerich was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by the University of Paris.[24] He received two more nominations in 1932 and 1935.[25] His concern for peace resulted in his creation of the Pax Cultura, the "Red Cross" of art and culture. His work for this cause also resulted in the United States and the 20 other nations of the Pan-American Union signing the Roerich Pact, an early international instrument protecting cultural property, on April 15, 1935 at the White House.

Manchurian expedition

In 1934–1935, the US Department of Agriculture, then headed by the Roerich admirer Henry A. Wallace, sponsored an expedition by Roerich and its scientists H. G. MacMillan and James F. Stephens to Inner Mongolia, Manchuria, and China. The expedition's purpose was to collect seeds of plants which prevented soil erosion.

The expedition consisted of two parts. In 1934, they explored the Greater Khingan mountains and Bargan plateau in western Manchuria. In 1935, they explored parts of Inner Mongolia: the Gobi Desert, Ordos Desert, and Helan Mountains. The expedition found almost 300 species of xerophytes, collected herbs, conducted archeological studies, and found antique manuscripts of great scientific importance.

Later life

 
Jawaharlal Nehru, Indira Gandhi, Nicholas Roerich, and Mohammad Yunus. (Roerich's estate, Kullu).

Roerich was in India during World War II, where he painted Russian epic heroic and saintly themes, including Alexander Nevsky, The Fight of Mstislav and Rededia, and Boris and Gleb.[26]

In 1942, Roerich received Jawaharlal Nehru and his daughter, Indira Gandhi, at his house in Kullu.[citation needed] Together they discussed the fate of the new world: "We spoke about Indian–Russian cultural association [...] it is time to think about useful and creative co-operation."[27]

Indira Gandhi would later recall several days spent together with Roerich's family: "That was a memorable visit to a surprising and gifted family where each member was a remarkable figure in himself, with a well-defined range of interests.... Roerich himself stays in my memory. He was a man with extensive knowledge and enormous experience, a man with a big heart, deeply influenced by all that he observed."

During the visit, "ideas and thoughts about closer co-operation between India and USSR were expressed. Now, after India wins independence, they have got its own real implementation[clarification needed]. And as you know, there are friendly and mutually-understanding relationships today between both our countries."[28]

In 1942, the American–Russian cultural Association (ARCA) was created in New York. Its active participants were Ernest Hemingway, Rockwell Kent, Charlie Chaplin, Emil Cooper, Serge Koussevitzky, and Valeriy Ivanovich Tereshchenko. Its activity was welcomed by scientists such as Robert Millikan and Arthur Compton.[29]

Roerich had a lengthy correspondence with Henry Wallace, the 1948 Progressive Party candidate for US president.

Roerich died in Kullu on December 13, 1947.[30]Helena Roerich wrote about this day: “The day of cremation was exceptionally beautiful. Not a single breath of wind and all surrounding mountains were clad in fresh snowy attire.”[31]

Cultural legacy

 
Altai. Peaks and passes named in honor of the Roerich family.
 
The minor planet 4426 Roerich in Solar System

In the 21st century, the Nicholas Roerich Museum in New York City is a major institution for Roerich's artistic work. Numerous Roerich societies continue to promote his theosophical teachings worldwide. His paintings can be seen in several museums including the Roerich Department of the State Museum of Oriental Arts in Moscow; the Roerich Museum at the International Centre of the Roerichs in Moscow; the Russian State Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia; a collection in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow; a collection in the Art Museum in Novosibirsk, Russia; an important collection in the National Gallery for Foreign Art in Sofia, Bulgaria; a collection in the Art Museum in Nizhny Novgorod Russia; National Museum of Serbia; the Roerich Hall Estate in Naggar, India; the Sree Chitra Art Gallery, Thiruvananthapuram, India;[32] in various art museums in India; and a selection featuring several of his larger works in The Latvian National Museum of Art. A memorial plaque marks the house in Lahaul valley where Roerich lived during summers from 1929 to 1932.[33]

Roerich's biography and his controversial expeditions to Tibet and Manchuria have been examined recently by a number of authors, including two Russians, Vladimir Rosov and Alexandre Andreyev, two Americans (Andrei Znamenski and John McCannon), and the German Ernst von Waldenfels.[34]

A series of his studies on the Himalayan Ranges-donated by the artist's son (36 works specifically) are even showcased in the Nicholas Roerich Gallery of the Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath Museum based in Bangalore, India. The hypnotic, immersive nature of his works truly absorbs the onlooker, leaving one with a sense of peace and tranquility as one moves with the series through the gallery.

H. P. Lovecraft refers numerous times to the "strange and disturbing Asian paintings of Nicholas Roerich" in his Antarctic horror story At the Mountains of Madness.[35]

Roerich was awarded Order of St. Sava.[36][37] The minor planet 4426 Roerich in the Solar System was named in honor of Roerich.

In June 2013 during Russian Art Week in London, Roerich's Madonna Laboris sold at auction at Bonhams shop for £7,881,250, including the buyer's premium, making it the most valuable painting ever sold at a Russian art auction.[38]

Gallery

Major works

  1. Art and archaeology // Art and art industry. SPb., 1898. No. 3; 1899. No. 4-5.
  2. Some ancient Shelonsky fifths and Bezhetsky end. SPb., 31 pages, drawings of the author, 1899.
  3. Excursion of the Archaeological Institute in 1899 in connection with the question of the Finnish burials of St. Petersburg province. SPb., 14 p., 1900.
  4. Some ancient stains Derevsky and Bezhetsk. SPb., 30 p., 1903.
  5. In the old days, St. Petersburg., 1904,18 p., drawings of the author.
  6. Stone age on lake piros., SPb., ed. "Russian archaeological society", 1905.
  7. Collected works. kN. 1. M.: publishing house of I. D. Sytin, p. 335, 1914.
  8. Tales and parables. Pg.: Free art, 1916.
  9. Violators of Art. London, 1919.
  10. The Flowers Of Moria. . Berlin: Word, 128 p., Collection of poems. 1921.
  11. Adamant. New York: Corona Mundi, 1922
  12. Ways Of Blessing. New York, Paris, Riga, Harbin: Alatas, 1924
  13. Altai - Himalayas. (Thoughts on a horse and in a tent) 1923–1926. Ulan Bator Khoto, 1927.
  14. heart of Asia. Southbury (St. Connecticut): Alatas, 1929.
  15. Flame in Chalice. Series X, Book 1. Songs and Sagas Series. New York: Roerich Museum Press, 1930.
  16. Shambhala. New York: F. A. Stokes Co., 1930
  17. Realm of Light. Series IX, Book II. Sayings of Eternity Series. New York: Roerich Museum Press, 1931.
  18. The Power Of Light. Southbury: Alatas, New York, 1931.
  19. Women. Address on the occasion of the opening of the Association of women, Riga, ed. About Roerich, 1931, 15 p., 1 reproduction.
  20. The Fiery Stronghold. Paris: World League Of Culture, 1932.
  21. banner of peace. Harbin, Alatyr, 1934.
  22. Holy Watch. Harbin, Alatyr, 1934.
  23. A gateway to the Future. Riga: Uguns, 1936.
  24. Indestructible. Riga: Uguns, 1936.
  25. Roerich Essays: One hundred essays. В 2 т. India, 1937.
  26. Beautiful Unity. Bombey, 1946.
  27. Himavat: Diary Leaveves. Allahabad: Kitabistan, 1946.
  28. Himalayas — Adobe of Light. Bombey: Nalanda Publ, 1947.
  29. Diary sheets. Vol. 1 (1934-1935). M: ICR, 1995.
  30. Diary sheets. Vol. 2 (1936-1941). M: ICR, 1995.
  31. Diary sheets. Vol. 3 (1942-1947). M: ICR, 1996.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Also spelled as Ryorikh, from Russian: Рёрих

References

  1. ^ Nicholas Roerich: In Search of Shambala by Victoria Klimentieva, стр. 31
  2. ^ Nicholas Roerich Museum October 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Andrei Znamenski, Red Shambhala: Magic, Prophecy, and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia, Quest Books (2011), p. 157
  4. ^ "Nicholas Roerich - Russian set designer". Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  5. ^ Nobel Prize Nomination Database
  6. ^ McCannon, John (2022). Nicholas Roerich: The Artist Who Would Be King. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 107-12. ISBN 978-0822947417.
  7. ^ Julie Besonen, "Visions of a Forgotten Utopian", New York Times, April 6, 2014.
  8. ^ McCannon, John (2022). Nicholas Roerich: The Artist Who Would Be King. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 121-64. ISBN 978-0822947417.
  9. ^ a b Hardiman, Louise; Kozicharow, Nicola (November 13, 2017). Modernism and the Spiritual in Russian Art: New Perspectives. ISBN 9781783743414.
  10. ^ Н. В. Сергеева. Древнерусская традиция в символизме Н.К. Рериха. М.: Международный Центр Рерихов, 2003. ISBN 5-86988-080-7. Page 87.
  11. ^ John McCannon, "Apocalypse and Tranquility: The World War I Paintings of Nicholas Roerich,” Russian History/Histoire Russe 30 (Fall 2003): 301-21
  12. ^ Bowlt, John E. (2008). Moscow and St. Petersburg 1900–1920: Art, Life and Culture. New York: The Vendome Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-86565-191-3.
  13. ^ "Agni Yoga". highest-yoga.info. from the original on October 23, 2018.
  14. ^ Andreyev, Alexandre (2003). Soviet Russia and Tibet: The Debacle of Secret Diplomacy, 1918-1930s. Brill. p. 294. ISBN 9004129529.
  15. ^ Andreyev, Alexandre (May 8, 2014). The Myth of the Masters Revived: The Occult Lives of Nikolai and Elena Roerich. BRILL. pp. 198–199. ISBN 978-90-04-27043-5.
  16. ^ Znamenski, Andrei (July 1, 2011). Red Shambhala: Magic, Prophecy, and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia. Quest Books. pp. 181–182. ISBN 978-0-8356-0891-6.
  17. ^ "Observer review: Tournament of Shadows by Karl Meyer and Shareen Brysac". The Guardian. January 7, 2001.
  18. ^ McCannon, John (2022). Nicholas Roerich: The Artist Who Would Be King. University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 978-0822947417.
  19. ^ Andreyev, Alexandre (2003). Soviet Russia and Tibet: The Debacle of Secret Diplomacy, 1918-1930s. Brill. p. 295. ISBN 9004129529.
  20. ^ AVPRF, op. 04, op. 13, papka 87, d. 50117, 1. 13a. Krestinsky to Checherin, January 2, 1925
  21. ^ "Andrei Znamenski, "Nicholas Roerich Shambhala Warrior"". YouTube..
  22. ^ Keyhoe, Donald (June 30, 2006). The Flying Saucers Are Real. ISBN 9781585092642.
  23. ^ "The Colorado Engineer". 1954.
  24. ^ "Roerich Nominated for Peace Award". New York Times. March 3, 1929. Retrieved February 3, 2009.
  25. ^ "Nomination Database - Peace". Retrieved June 14, 2016.
  26. ^ Peter Leek (2005). Russian Painting. Parkstone International. pp. 256–. ISBN 978-1-78042-975-5. Retrieved June 23, 2013.
  27. ^ N. Roerich. Diary Leaves. V. 3. – Moscow, International Centre of the Roerichs. – 1996. – p.39. ISBN 5-86988-056-4
  28. ^ Interview with Indira Gandhi December 12, 2009, at the Wayback Machine / Roerich's Empire. (Derzhava Rerikhov) (in Russian). / Collected Articles. – Moscow, International Centre of the Roerichs, Master-Bank. – 2004. – p.65. ISBN 5-86988-148-X
  29. ^ Ruth Abrams Drayer (2005). Nicholas and Helena Roerich: The Spiritual Journey of Two Great Artists and Peacemakers. Quest Books. pp. 330–. ISBN 978-0-8356-0843-5. Retrieved June 23, 2013.
  30. ^ Madhukar, J. (October 20, 2019). "Remembering Roerich". ‘The Bangalore Mirror’. Retrieved January 29, 2020.
  31. ^ Kamalakaran, A. (May 2, 2012). "Nicholas Roerich's legacy lives on in Himalayan Hamlet". from the original on June 21, 2022. Retrieved July 21, 2022.
  32. ^ "Dust throws a blanket over prized paintings". The Hindu. April 21, 2013..
  33. ^ "Roerich In Lahul". Roerich In Lahul. Retrieved November 8, 2022.
  34. ^ Nicholas Roerich: the Messenger of Zvenigorod (vol. 1: The Great Plan, vol. 2: The New Country) (2002–2004) [summary of the books in English at . Archived from the original on November 10, 2013. Retrieved August 9, 2012.]; Alexandre Andreyev, Gimalaiski mif i ego tvotry [Himalayan Myth and its Makers] (St. Petersburg: St. Petersburg University Press, 2004) [in Russian]; Andrei Znamenski, Red Shambhala: Magic, Prophesy, and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia (Quest Books, 2011) [see an excerpt from the book at http://www.trimondi.de/EN/Red_Shambhala.htm]; John McCannon, Nicholas Roerich: The Artist Who Would Be King (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press, 2022) [1]; John McCannon, "Searching for Shambhala: The Mystical Art and Epic Journeys of Nikolai Roerich," Russian Life (January–February 2001); John McCannon, "By the Shores of White Waters: The Altai and Its Place in the Spiritual Geopolitics of Nicholas Roerich,” Sibirica: Journal of Siberian Studies (October 2002) [2]; Ernst von Waldenfels, Nicholas Roerich: Kunst, Macht und Okkultismus (Osburg, 2011)
  35. ^ McCannon, John (2022). Nicholas Roerich: The Artist Who Would Be King. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 366-67. ISBN 978-0822947417.
  36. ^ Radulovic, Nemanja. "Rerihov pokret u Kraljevini Jugoslaviji". Godišnjak Katedre za srpsku književnost sa južnoslovenskim književnostima, XI, 2016.
  37. ^ "Vreme - Kultura i politika: Selidba trajne pozajmice". www.vreme.com. February 27, 2019. Retrieved July 11, 2019.
  38. ^ "Bonhams : Nikolai Konstantinovich Roerich (Russian, 1874-1947) Madonna Laboris". Retrieved June 14, 2016.

External links

  • International Centre of the Roerichs
  • International Roerich Memorial Trust (India)
  • Nicholas Roerich Museum (New York)
  • Estonian Roerich Society
  • Roerich-movement on the Internet (in Russian)
  • Paintings Gallery
  • Nicholas Roerich Estate Museum in Izvara
  • Roerich Family March 12, 2016, at the Wayback Machine
  • Nicholas Roerich at Find a Grave
  • Catalogue of Nicholas Roerich`s works from the collection of Gorlovka Art Museum
  • W.H. Crain Costume and Scene Design Collection at the Harry Ransom Center
  • Nicholas Roerich Papers, J Murrey Atkins Library, UNC Charlotte
  • Nicholas Roerich Lexicon
  • Gallery of Russian Thinkers on Nicholas Roerich, ISFP Gallery of Russian Thinkers
  • Nikolay and Svyatoslav Roerich

nicholas, roerich, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, konstantinovich, family, name, roerich, october, 1874, december, 1947, also, known, nikolai, konstantinovich, rerikh, russian, Никола, Константи, нович, Ре, рих, ru. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Konstantinovich and the family name is Roerich Nicholas Roerich ˈ r ɛr ɪ k October 9 1874 December 13 1947 also known as Nikolai Konstantinovich Rerikh a Russian Nikola j Konstanti novich Re rih was a Russian painter writer archaeologist theosophist philosopher and public figure In his youth he was influenced by Russian Symbolism a movement in Russian society centered on the spiritual He was interested in hypnosis and other spiritual practices and his paintings are said to have hypnotic expression 1 2 Nicholas RoerichBorn 1874 10 09 October 9 1874Saint Petersburg Russian EmpireDiedDecember 13 1947 1947 12 13 aged 73 Naggar Dominion of IndiaNationalityRussianOccupation s painter archaeologist costume and set designer for ballets operas and dramasSpouseHelena RoerichChildrenGeorge de Roerich Svetoslav RoerichSignatureBorn in Saint Petersburg to a well to do Baltic German father and to a Russian mother 3 Roerich lived in various places in the world until his death in Naggar 4 Himachal Pradesh India Trained as an artist and a lawyer his main interests were literature philosophy archaeology and especially art Roerich was a dedicated activist for the cause of preserving art and architecture during times of war He was nominated several times to the longlist for the Nobel Peace Prize 5 The so called Roerich Pact for the protection of cultural objects was signed into law by the United States and most other nations of the Pan American Union in April 1935 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Revolution and emigration to United States 1 3 Asian expedition 1925 1929 1 4 Manchurian expedition 1 5 Later life 2 Cultural legacy 3 Gallery 4 Major works 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Guests from Overseas 1901 Varangians in Rus Raised in late 19th century St Petersburg Roerich enrolled simultaneously at St Petersburg University and the Imperial Academy of Arts in 1893 He received the title of artist in 1897 and a degree in law the next year He found early employment with the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts whose school he directed from 1906 to 1917 Despite early tensions with the group he became a member of Sergei Diaghilev s World of Art society and was its president from 1910 to 1916 Artistically Roerich became known as his generation s most talented painter of Russia s ancient past a topic that was compatible with his lifelong interest in archeology He also succeeded as a stage designer by achieving his greatest fame as one of the designers for Diaghilev s Ballets Russes His best known designs were for Alexander Borodin s Prince Igor 1909 and later productions 6 and costumes and set for The Rite of Spring 1913 7 8 composed by Igor Stravinsky Along with Mikhail Vrubel and Mikhail Nesterov Roerich is considered a major representative of Russian Symbolism in art 9 From an early period of his life he was influenced by apocrypha and medieval sectarian writings such as the mysterious Dove Book 10 Another of Roerich s artistic subjects was architecture His acclaimed publication Architectural Studies 1904 1905 consisting of dozens of paintings he made of fortresses monasteries churches and other monuments during two long trips through Russia inspired his decades long career as an activist on behalf of artistic and architectural preservation He also designed religious art for places of worship throughout Russia and Ukraine most notably the Queen of Heaven fresco for the Church of the Holy Spirit which the patroness Maria Tenisheva built near her Talashkino estate and the stained glass windows for the Datsan Gunzechoinei in 1913 1915 His designs for the Talashkino church were so radical that the Orthodox church refused to consecrate the building 9 During the first decade of the 1900s and in the early 1910s Roerich largely by the influence of his wife Helena developed an interest in eastern religions as well as alternative belief systems such as Theosophy Both Roerichs became avid readers of the Vedantist essays of Ramakrishna and Vivekananda the poetry of Rabindranath Tagore and the Bhagavad Gita The Roerichs commitment to occult mysticism increased steadily It was especially intense during World War I and the 1917 Russian Revolution to which the couple like other many Russian intellectuals accorded apocalyptic significance 11 The influence of Theosophy Vedanta Buddhism and other mystical topics can be detected not only in many of Roerich s paintings but also in the many short stories and poems that Roerich wrote before and after the 1917 revolutions including the Flowers of Morya cycle which was begun in 1907 and completed in 1921 Revolution and emigration to United States Edit Nicholas Roerich by Kustodiev 1913 Further information Yoga in Russia After the February Revolution of 1917 and the end of the czarist regime Roerich a political moderate who valued Russia s cultural heritage more than ideology and party politics had an active part in artistic politics With Maxim Gorky and Aleksandr Benois he participated with the so called Gorky Commission and its successor organization the Arts Union SDI Both attempted to gain the attention of the Provisional Government and Petrograd Soviet on the need to form a coherent cultural policy and most urgently to protect art and architecture from destruction and vandalism Meanwhile illness forced Roerich to leave the capital and reside in Karelia the district bordering Finland He had already quit the presidency of the World of Art society and he now quit the directorship of the School of the Imperial Society for the Encouragement of the Arts After the October Revolution and the acquisition of power of Lenin s Bolshevik Party Roerich became increasingly discouraged about Russia s political future During early 1918 he Helena and their two sons George and Svetoslav emigrated to Finland Two unresolved historical debates are associated with Roerich s departure First it is often claimed that Roerich was a major candidate to direct a people s commissariat of culture the Soviet equivalent of a ministry of culture which the Bolsheviks considered establishing in 1917 1918 but he refused to accept the job In fact Benois was the most likely choice to direct any such commissariat It seems that Roerich was a preferred choice to manage its department of artistic education the topic is rendered moot by the fact that the Soviets elected not to establish such a commissariat Second when Roerich later wished to reconcile with the Soviet Union he maintained that he had not left Soviet Russia deliberately but that he and his family living in Karelia had been isolated from their homeland when the Finnish Civil War began However Roerich had an amply documented extreme hostility to the Bolshevik regime prompted not so much by a dislike of communism as by his revulsion at Lenin s ruthlessness and his fear that Bolshevism would result in the destruction of Russia s artistic and architectural heritage He illustrated Leonid Andreyev s anticommunist polemic S O S and had a widely published pamphlet Violators of Art 1918 1919 Roerich believed that the triumph of Russian culture would come about through a new appreciation of ancient myth and legend 12 After some months in Finland and Scandinavia the Roerichs relocated to London arriving in mid 1919 Engrossed with Theosophical mysticism they now had millenarian expectations that a new age was imminent and they wished to travel to India as soon as possible They joined the English Welsh chapter of the Theosophical Society It was in London in March 1920 that the Roerichs founded their own school of mysticism Agni Yoga 13 which they described as the system of living ethics To earn passage to India Roerich worked as a stage designer for Thomas Beecham s Covent Garden Theatre but the enterprise ended unsuccessfully in 1920 and the artist never received full payment for his work Among the notable people Roerich befriended while in England were the famed British Buddhist Christmas Humphreys the philosopher author H G Wells and the poet and Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore whose grand niece Devika Rani would later marry Roerich s son Svetoslav A successful exhibition in London resulted in an invitation from a director at the Art Institute of Chicago offering to arrange for Roerich s art to tour the United States In the autumn of 1920 the Roerichs traveled to America by sea Car of Nicolas Roerich in his museum at Naggar The Roerichs remained in the United States from October 1920 until May 1923 A large exhibition of Roerich s art organized partly by the U S impresario Christian Brinton and partly by the Chicago Art Institute began in New York in December 1920 and toured the country to San Francisco and back in 1921 and early 1922 Roerich befriended acclaimed soprano Mary Garden of the Chicago Opera and received a commission to design a 1922 production of Rimsky Korsakov s The Snow Maiden for her During the exhibition the Roerichs spent significant amounts of time in Chicago New Mexico and California Politically Roerich was at first anti Bolshevik He gave lectures and wrote articles to White Russian populations in which he criticized the Soviet Union However his aversion to communism the impertinent monster that lies to humanity changed in America Roerich claimed that his spiritual masters the Mahatmas in the Himalayas were communicating telepathically with him through his wife Helena who was a mystic and a clairvoyant The beings from an esoteric Buddhist community in India were said to have told Roerich that Russia was destined for a mission on Earth That led him to formulate his Great Plan which envisaged the unification of millions of Asian peoples through a religious movement using the Future Buddha or Maitreya into a Second Union of the East There the King of Shambhala would following the Maitreya prophecies make his appearance to fight a great battle against all evil forces on Earth Roerich understood that as perfection towards Common Good The new polity was to include southwestern Altai Tuva Buryatia Outer and Inner Mongolia Xinjiang and Tibet with its capital in Zvenigorod the City of Tolling Bells which was to be built at the foot of Mount Belukha in Altai According to Roerich the same Mahatmas revealed to him in 1922 that he was an incarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama 14 Roerichs collaboration with Bolshevik diplomats and aim to gather intelligence on the British led several scholars to place Nicholas Roerich as a participant in the British Russian colonial Great Game 15 16 17 18 In 1923 Roerich the practical idealist set out to the Himalayas with his wife and his son Yuri Roerich initially settled in Darjeeling in the same house that the 13th Dalai Lama had stayed during his exile in India Roerich spent his time painting the Himalayas with visitors such as Frederick Marshman Bailey Lady Lytton and members of the 1924 British Everest Expedition as well as Sonam Wangfel Laden La Kusho Doring and Tsarong Shape influential Tibetans According to British intelligence lamas from the Moru monastery recognized Roerich as the incarnation of the Fifth Dalai Lama due to a mole pattern on his right cheek It was during his stay in the Himalayas that Roerich learned about the flight of the 9th Panchen Lama which he interpreted as the fulfillment of the Matreiya prophecies and the bringing about of the Age of Shambhala 19 In 1924 the Roerichs returned to the West On his way to America Roerich stopped at the Soviet embassy in Berlin where he told the local plenipotentiary about a Central Asian expedition he wanted to take He asked for Soviet protection on his way and shared his impressions of politics in India and Tibet Roerich commented on the occupation of Tibet by the British by claiming that they infiltrate in small parties conduct extensive anti Soviet propaganda by talking about anti religious activity of the Bolsheviks The plenipotentiary later pointed out to one of Roerich s old university classmates Georgy Chicherin that he had absolutely pro Soviet leanings which looked somewhat Buddho Communistic and that his son who spoke 28 Asian languages helped him in gaining the favor with the Indians and the Tibetans 20 The Roerichs settled in New York City which became the base of their many American operations They founded several institutions during these years Cor Ardens Flaming Heart and Corona Mundi Crown of the World both of which were meant to unite artists around the globe in the cause of civic activism the Master Institute of United Arts an art school with a versatile curriculum and the eventual home of the first Nicholas Roerich Museum and an American Agni Yoga Society They also joined various theosophical societies their activities with these groups dominated their lives Asian expedition 1925 1929 Edit Roerich s family Kullu valley India After leaving New York the Roerichs together with their son George and six friends began the five year Roerich Asian Expedition that in Roerich s own words started from Sikkim through Punjab Kashmir Ladakh the Karakoram Mountains Khotan Kashgar Qara Shar Urumchi Irtysh the Altai Mountains the Oyrot region of Mongolia the Central Gobi Kansu Tsaidam and Tibet with a detour through Siberia to Moscow in 1926 The Roerichs Asian expedition attracted attention from the foreign services and intelligence agencies of the Soviet Union the United States the United Kingdom and Japan In fact prior to this expedition Roerich had solicited the help of the Soviet government and Bolshevik secret police to assist him in his expedition by promising in return to monitor British activities in the area but he received only a lukewarm response from Mikhail Trilisser the chief of the Soviet foreign intelligence The Bolsheviks assisted Roerich with logistics while he was traveling through Siberia and Mongolia However they did not commit themselves to his reckless project of the Sacred Union of the East a spiritual utopia that boiled down to Roerich s ambitious attempts to stir the Buddhist masses of inner Asia to create a highly spiritual co operative commonwealth under the patronage of Bolshevik Russia The official mission of his expedition as Roerich put it was to act as the embassy of Western Buddhism to Tibet To the Western media it was presented as an artistic and scientific enterprise 21 Roerich reported seeing a metallic oval in the sky over the Tibet Decades later UFO enthusiasts would claim the Roerich expedition witnessed a flying saucer 22 23 Between the summer of 1927 and June 1928 the expedition was thought to have been lost as communication with them had ceased They had in fact been attacked in Tibet Roerich wrote that only the superiority of our firearms prevented bloodshed In spite of our having Tibet passports the expedition was forcibly stopped by Tibetan authorities They were detained by the government for five months and were forced to live in tents in sub zero conditions and to subsist on meagre rations Five men of the expedition died during this time In March 1928 they were allowed to leave Tibet and they trekked south to settle in India where they founded a research center the Himalayan Research Institute In 1929 Roerich was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by the University of Paris 24 He received two more nominations in 1932 and 1935 25 His concern for peace resulted in his creation of the Pax Cultura the Red Cross of art and culture His work for this cause also resulted in the United States and the 20 other nations of the Pan American Union signing the Roerich Pact an early international instrument protecting cultural property on April 15 1935 at the White House Manchurian expedition Edit In 1934 1935 the US Department of Agriculture then headed by the Roerich admirer Henry A Wallace sponsored an expedition by Roerich and its scientists H G MacMillan and James F Stephens to Inner Mongolia Manchuria and China The expedition s purpose was to collect seeds of plants which prevented soil erosion The expedition consisted of two parts In 1934 they explored the Greater Khingan mountains and Bargan plateau in western Manchuria In 1935 they explored parts of Inner Mongolia the Gobi Desert Ordos Desert and Helan Mountains The expedition found almost 300 species of xerophytes collected herbs conducted archeological studies and found antique manuscripts of great scientific importance Later life Edit Jawaharlal Nehru Indira Gandhi Nicholas Roerich and Mohammad Yunus Roerich s estate Kullu Roerich was in India during World War II where he painted Russian epic heroic and saintly themes including Alexander Nevsky The Fight of Mstislav and Rededia and Boris and Gleb 26 In 1942 Roerich received Jawaharlal Nehru and his daughter Indira Gandhi at his house in Kullu citation needed Together they discussed the fate of the new world We spoke about Indian Russian cultural association it is time to think about useful and creative co operation 27 Indira Gandhi would later recall several days spent together with Roerich s family That was a memorable visit to a surprising and gifted family where each member was a remarkable figure in himself with a well defined range of interests Roerich himself stays in my memory He was a man with extensive knowledge and enormous experience a man with a big heart deeply influenced by all that he observed During the visit ideas and thoughts about closer co operation between India and USSR were expressed Now after India wins independence they have got its own real implementation clarification needed And as you know there are friendly and mutually understanding relationships today between both our countries 28 In 1942 the American Russian cultural Association ARCA was created in New York Its active participants were Ernest Hemingway Rockwell Kent Charlie Chaplin Emil Cooper Serge Koussevitzky and Valeriy Ivanovich Tereshchenko Its activity was welcomed by scientists such as Robert Millikan and Arthur Compton 29 Roerich had a lengthy correspondence with Henry Wallace the 1948 Progressive Party candidate for US president Roerich died in Kullu on December 13 1947 30 Helena Roerich wrote about this day The day of cremation was exceptionally beautiful Not a single breath of wind and all surrounding mountains were clad in fresh snowy attire 31 Cultural legacy Edit Altai Peaks and passes named in honor of the Roerich family The minor planet 4426 Roerich in Solar System In the 21st century the Nicholas Roerich Museum in New York City is a major institution for Roerich s artistic work Numerous Roerich societies continue to promote his theosophical teachings worldwide His paintings can be seen in several museums including the Roerich Department of the State Museum of Oriental Arts in Moscow the Roerich Museum at the International Centre of the Roerichs in Moscow the Russian State Museum in Saint Petersburg Russia a collection in the Tretyakov Gallery in Moscow a collection in the Art Museum in Novosibirsk Russia an important collection in the National Gallery for Foreign Art in Sofia Bulgaria a collection in the Art Museum in Nizhny Novgorod Russia National Museum of Serbia the Roerich Hall Estate in Naggar India the Sree Chitra Art Gallery Thiruvananthapuram India 32 in various art museums in India and a selection featuring several of his larger works in The Latvian National Museum of Art A memorial plaque marks the house in Lahaul valley where Roerich lived during summers from 1929 to 1932 33 Roerich s biography and his controversial expeditions to Tibet and Manchuria have been examined recently by a number of authors including two Russians Vladimir Rosov and Alexandre Andreyev two Americans Andrei Znamenski and John McCannon and the German Ernst von Waldenfels 34 A series of his studies on the Himalayan Ranges donated by the artist s son 36 works specifically are even showcased in the Nicholas Roerich Gallery of the Karnataka Chitrakala Parishath Museum based in Bangalore India The hypnotic immersive nature of his works truly absorbs the onlooker leaving one with a sense of peace and tranquility as one moves with the series through the gallery H P Lovecraft refers numerous times to the strange and disturbing Asian paintings of Nicholas Roerich in his Antarctic horror story At the Mountains of Madness 35 Roerich was awarded Order of St Sava 36 37 The minor planet 4426 Roerich in the Solar System was named in honor of Roerich In June 2013 during Russian Art Week in London Roerich s Madonna Laboris sold at auction at Bonhams shop for 7 881 250 including the buyer s premium making it the most valuable painting ever sold at a Russian art auction 38 Gallery Edit And We Are Opening the Gates from the Sancta Series And We Are Trying from the Sancta Series Treasure of angels And We See from the Sancta Series Monhegan Maine The Messenger source source source source source source Nicolas Roerich India Kullu 1947 N K Roerich About Shambala source source Phonogram of 1929 Problems playing this file See media help Major works EditArt and archaeology Art and art industry SPb 1898 No 3 1899 No 4 5 Some ancient Shelonsky fifths and Bezhetsky end SPb 31 pages drawings of the author 1899 Excursion of the Archaeological Institute in 1899 in connection with the question of the Finnish burials of St Petersburg province SPb 14 p 1900 Some ancient stains Derevsky and Bezhetsk SPb 30 p 1903 In the old days St Petersburg 1904 18 p drawings of the author Stone age on lake piros SPb ed Russian archaeological society 1905 Collected works kN 1 M publishing house of I D Sytin p 335 1914 Tales and parables Pg Free art 1916 Violators of Art London 1919 The Flowers Of Moria Berlin Word 128 p Collection of poems 1921 Adamant New York Corona Mundi 1922 Ways Of Blessing New York Paris Riga Harbin Alatas 1924 Altai Himalayas Thoughts on a horse and in a tent 1923 1926 Ulan Bator Khoto 1927 heart of Asia Southbury St Connecticut Alatas 1929 Flame in Chalice Series X Book 1 Songs and Sagas Series New York Roerich Museum Press 1930 Shambhala New York F A Stokes Co 1930 Realm of Light Series IX Book II Sayings of Eternity Series New York Roerich Museum Press 1931 The Power Of Light Southbury Alatas New York 1931 Women Address on the occasion of the opening of the Association of women Riga ed About Roerich 1931 15 p 1 reproduction The Fiery Stronghold Paris World League Of Culture 1932 banner of peace Harbin Alatyr 1934 Holy Watch Harbin Alatyr 1934 A gateway to the Future Riga Uguns 1936 Indestructible Riga Uguns 1936 Roerich Essays One hundred essays V 2 t India 1937 Beautiful Unity Bombey 1946 Himavat Diary Leaveves Allahabad Kitabistan 1946 Himalayas Adobe of Light Bombey Nalanda Publ 1947 Diary sheets Vol 1 1934 1935 M ICR 1995 Diary sheets Vol 2 1936 1941 M ICR 1995 Diary sheets Vol 3 1942 1947 M ICR 1996 See also EditBanner of Peace List of peace activists Morya Theosophy Russian cosmism RoerichismNotes Edit Also spelled as Ryorikh from Russian RyorihReferences Edit Nicholas Roerich In Search of Shambala by Victoria Klimentieva str 31 Nicholas Roerich Museum Archived October 6 2014 at the Wayback Machine Andrei Znamenski Red Shambhala Magic Prophecy and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia Quest Books 2011 p 157 Nicholas Roerich Russian set designer Retrieved June 14 2016 Nobel Prize Nomination Database McCannon John 2022 Nicholas Roerich The Artist Who Would Be King University of Pittsburgh Press p 107 12 ISBN 978 0822947417 Julie Besonen Visions of a Forgotten Utopian New York Times April 6 2014 McCannon John 2022 Nicholas Roerich The Artist Who Would Be King University of Pittsburgh Press p 121 64 ISBN 978 0822947417 a b Hardiman Louise Kozicharow Nicola November 13 2017 Modernism and the Spiritual in Russian Art New Perspectives ISBN 9781783743414 N V Sergeeva Drevnerusskaya tradiciya v simvolizme N K Reriha M Mezhdunarodnyj Centr Rerihov 2003 ISBN 5 86988 080 7 Page 87 John McCannon Apocalypse and Tranquility The World War I Paintings of Nicholas Roerich Russian History Histoire Russe 30 Fall 2003 301 21 Bowlt John E 2008 Moscow and St Petersburg 1900 1920 Art Life and Culture New York The Vendome Press p 69 ISBN 978 0 86565 191 3 Agni Yoga highest yoga info Archived from the original on October 23 2018 Andreyev Alexandre 2003 Soviet Russia and Tibet The Debacle of Secret Diplomacy 1918 1930s Brill p 294 ISBN 9004129529 Andreyev Alexandre May 8 2014 The Myth of the Masters Revived The Occult Lives of Nikolai and Elena Roerich BRILL pp 198 199 ISBN 978 90 04 27043 5 Znamenski Andrei July 1 2011 Red Shambhala Magic Prophecy and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia Quest Books pp 181 182 ISBN 978 0 8356 0891 6 Observer review Tournament of Shadows by Karl Meyer and Shareen Brysac The Guardian January 7 2001 McCannon John 2022 Nicholas Roerich The Artist Who Would Be King University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 978 0822947417 Andreyev Alexandre 2003 Soviet Russia and Tibet The Debacle of Secret Diplomacy 1918 1930s Brill p 295 ISBN 9004129529 AVPRF op 04 op 13 papka 87 d 50117 1 13a Krestinsky to Checherin January 2 1925 Andrei Znamenski Nicholas Roerich Shambhala Warrior YouTube Keyhoe Donald June 30 2006 The Flying Saucers Are Real ISBN 9781585092642 The Colorado Engineer 1954 Roerich Nominated for Peace Award New York Times March 3 1929 Retrieved February 3 2009 Nomination Database Peace Retrieved June 14 2016 Peter Leek 2005 Russian Painting Parkstone International pp 256 ISBN 978 1 78042 975 5 Retrieved June 23 2013 N Roerich Diary Leaves V 3 Moscow International Centre of the Roerichs 1996 p 39 ISBN 5 86988 056 4 Interview with Indira Gandhi Archived December 12 2009 at the Wayback Machine Roerich s Empire Derzhava Rerikhov in Russian Collected Articles Moscow International Centre of the Roerichs Master Bank 2004 p 65 ISBN 5 86988 148 X Ruth Abrams Drayer 2005 Nicholas and Helena Roerich The Spiritual Journey of Two Great Artists and Peacemakers Quest Books pp 330 ISBN 978 0 8356 0843 5 Retrieved June 23 2013 Madhukar J October 20 2019 Remembering Roerich The Bangalore Mirror Retrieved January 29 2020 Kamalakaran A May 2 2012 Nicholas Roerich s legacy lives on in Himalayan Hamlet Archived from the original on June 21 2022 Retrieved July 21 2022 Dust throws a blanket over prized paintings The Hindu April 21 2013 Roerich In Lahul Roerich In Lahul Retrieved November 8 2022 Nicholas Roerich the Messenger of Zvenigorod vol 1 The Great Plan vol 2 The New Country 2002 2004 summary of the books in English at Summary of Vladimir Rosovs books Nicholas Roerich The Messenger of Zvenigorod Website Living Ethics in the World Archived from the original on November 10 2013 Retrieved August 9 2012 Alexandre Andreyev Gimalaiski mif i ego tvotry Himalayan Myth and its Makers St Petersburg St Petersburg University Press 2004 in Russian Andrei Znamenski Red Shambhala Magic Prophesy and Geopolitics in the Heart of Asia Quest Books 2011 see an excerpt from the book at http www trimondi de EN Red Shambhala htm John McCannon Nicholas Roerich The Artist Who Would Be King Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press 2022 1 John McCannon Searching for Shambhala The Mystical Art and Epic Journeys of Nikolai Roerich Russian Life January February 2001 John McCannon By the Shores of White Waters The Altai and Its Place in the Spiritual Geopolitics of Nicholas Roerich Sibirica Journal of Siberian Studies October 2002 2 Ernst von Waldenfels Nicholas Roerich Kunst Macht und Okkultismus Osburg 2011 McCannon John 2022 Nicholas Roerich The Artist Who Would Be King University of Pittsburgh Press p 366 67 ISBN 978 0822947417 Radulovic Nemanja Rerihov pokret u Kraljevini Jugoslaviji Godisnjak Katedre za srpsku knjizevnost sa juznoslovenskim knjizevnostima XI 2016 Vreme Kultura i politika Selidba trajne pozajmice www vreme com February 27 2019 Retrieved July 11 2019 Bonhams Nikolai Konstantinovich Roerich Russian 1874 1947 Madonna Laboris Retrieved June 14 2016 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Nicholas Roerich Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nicholas Roerich International Centre of the Roerichs International Roerich Memorial Trust India Nicholas Roerich Museum New York Estonian Roerich Society Roerich movement on the Internet in Russian Paintings Gallery Nicholas Roerich Estate Museum in Izvara Roerich Family Archived March 12 2016 at the Wayback Machine Nicholas Roerich at Find a Grave Catalogue of Nicholas Roerich s works from the collection of Gorlovka Art Museum W H Crain Costume and Scene Design Collection at the Harry Ransom Center Nicholas Roerich Papers J Murrey Atkins Library UNC Charlotte Nicholas Roerich Lexicon Gallery of Russian Thinkers on Nicholas Roerich ISFP Gallery of Russian Thinkers Nikolay and Svyatoslav Roerich Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nicholas Roerich amp oldid 1149887944, 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