The Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room was one of the most popular exhibitions at the Rubin Museum’s 17th Street building in New York City, experienced by more than one million visitors from the year it opened in 2015 until the building’s closure in 2024.

In a commitment to ensure New York City communities and visitors continue to have access to the Rubin’s collection, the Shrine Room will find a new home at the Brooklyn Museum’s Arts of Asia galleries. Opening in June 2025, it will launch a six-year collaboration between the institutions that includes collection sharing and curatorial exchange.

About the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine RoomAbout the Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room

More than 100 works of art and ritual objects from the Rubin’s collection are presented as they would be in an elaborate private household shrine, where devotees make offerings, pray, contemplate, and perform rituals. The design of the Shrine Room showcases these objects in an immersive environment that incorporates elements of traditional Tibetan architecture and the color schemes of Tibetan homes.

The Shrine Room evokes the aesthetics and atmosphere of a traditional Tibetan sacred space and offers visitors the opportunity to experience Tibetan religious art in its cultural context. It features scroll paintings known as thangkas, sculptures, ritual items, and musical instruments arranged on traditional Tibetan furniture according to the hierarchy they assume in Tibetan Buddhist practices.

Experience the Shrine Room at home

SupportSupport

The Shrine Room is supported by The Robert H. N. Ho Family Foundation, Namita and Arun Saraf, and by generous donations from the Museum’s Board of Trustees, individual donors, and Friends of the Rubin.

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