For independently distributed $x_i$'s, each with cumulative distribution $$F_i(x_i)=\tfrac{1}{2}+\tfrac{1}{2}{\rm Erf}\,[(x_i-\mu_i)/(\sigma_i\sqrt 2],$$ the cumulative distribution of the maximum is given by $$P({\rm max}_i \,x_i<X_{\rm max})=\prod_{i=1}^n P(x_i<X_{\rm max})=\prod_{i=1}^n F_i(X_{\rm max}).$$ For small $n$ you can now calculate moments of $X_{\rm max}$ by integration, $$E(X_{\rm max}^p)=\int_{-\infty}^\infty x^p\frac{d}{dx}\left(\prod_{i=1}^n F_i(x)\right)\,dx.$$ There is unlikely to be a closed-form answer for arbitrary $n$, in fact, even the $n=2$ integral seems problematic (Mathematica fails to evaluate it). If you take the $\mu_i$'s and $\sigma_i$'s to be the same, then progress can be made, for $n=2$ I find $$E(X_{\rm max})=\mu+\sigma/\sqrt\pi,\;\;{\rm Var}\,(X_{\rm max})=(1-1/\pi)\sigma^2.$$
Perhaps you are satisfied with a large-$n$ approximation. For identical $\mu_i$'s and $\sigma_i$'s it is given by the Fisher–Tippett–Gnedenko theorem, see for example this MSE posting. I have found one paper that generalizes this to arbitrary $\mu_i$'s and $\sigma_i$'s: On the distribution of the maximum of n independent normal random variables: iid and inid cases, but I have difficulty parsing their result (a rescaled Gumbel distribution).
There is more in that reference that I do not understand. They give the inequality $$\frac{1}{n}\sum_i\mu_i\leq E(X_{\rm max})\leq \frac{1}{n}\sum_i\mu_i+\frac{n-1}{n}\,{\rm max}_i\,\mu_i$$ which contradicts the $n=2$ result given above.