In 1895, Aby's brother
Paul Warburg married Nina Loeb (daughter of
Solomon Loeb) in New York City, marking the beginning of Aby Warburg's travels in the southwestern United States. Before heading West, he had met veteran anthropologists
James Mooney and
Frank Hamilton Cushing at the
Smithsonian Institution, both of whom contributed to early ethnographies of Indigenous Americans. Warburg's correspondence with
James Loeb which began at this time has been discussed in "Studies on Aby Warburg, Fritz Saxl and Gertrud Bing" which focuses on their communications about art and culture. Warburg's first stop in his travels was
Mesa Verde to see the
Ancestral Pueblo cliff dwellings. He continued on to visit a number of
Pueblo villages in
New Mexico before stopping in
San Ildefonso, where he had the opportunity to photograph a traditional Antelope dance. In
Cochiti, Warburg convinced a priest and his son to illustrate their people's cosmology; their drawing highlighted the importance of meteorological phenomena and serpents to their cultural worldview. Warburg's interest in Hopi snake imagery was also apparent through his interest in the
snake dance of the Arizona Hopi. He had first heard of this tradition through discussions with Mooney, and although he never witnessed the dance firsthand it remained influential to his writings about the Hopi. In general, the Hopi culture represented a recurring object of Warburg's fascination: their architecture, rituals, masks, symbolism, and the ancient tradition of pottery painting (a tradition that was undergoing a revival, partly thanks to
Nampeyo). Some of Warburg's observations of the Hopi people were informed by the
Mennonite missionary, evangelist and ethnographer
Heinrich R. Voth. Voth shared Warburg's interest in Hopi religion and culture and provided Warburg with details about the famous Hopi snake dance, as well as introducing him to Hopi people and giving him access to sacred Hopi ceremonies and photographic opportunities. In
Oraibi, the last stop in southwestern voyage, Warburg attended and diligently recorded his experience at
Kachina dances. Warburg's American travels served as the inspiration for his first forays into photography and ethnography, but aside from two photographic exhibits, his personal accounts of his experiences among the Pueblo and Hopi peoples remained largely unexamined for nearly three decades. He ended up reviving his travel notes for his now-famous 1923 lecture on the Hopi snake dance ritual. In it, he stressed the kinship of religious thinking in
Athens and
Oraibi. The lecture also became the grounds by which Warburg was released from his psychiatric treatment at the Bellevue Sanitorium. == Florence ==