Zoe Hathaway
Zoé Shaw Hathaway has been a fused glass and multimedia artist since 1996. She has served as a U.S. Park Service Resident Artist and Faculty Member at Glen Echo National Park, an Adjunct Faculty Member at the Corcoran College of Art + Design, a Resident Artist at the Rockville Arts Place and a Resident Glass Artist at the Workhouse Arts Center.
Ms. Hathaway has also been a partner in several glass studios in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, and has both studied and taught studied fused glass techniques extensively. She served as one of two jurors for the 2017 Tempe Festival of the Arts, and has done both choreography and performance with several noted modern dance companies. She has also taught movement and dance at all levels. Ms. Hathaway also studied oil and watercolor portraiture. She incorporates portraits as well as movement into her fused glass works.
Her works have been exhibited internationally, including Lithuania under the Arts in Embassies Program and in Egypt with an International Artists group (IASG). Her fused glass works are often presented in a series that interpret international settings and culture, such as her Song Lines series drawing upon Aboriginal boundary demarcations from the harmonic resonances produced by singers along the boundary of adjacent territories.
She has developed unique fused glass techniques to create large three dimensional works of glass that incorporate wire sculptures that form both the mold for a fused glass works and are often incorporated into the works.
Ms. Hathaway relocated from New Orleans, first studying abroad in France, and then in Washington, D.C. obtaining a Master of Arts degree in 1987 from George Washington University. Her concentration was in modern dance.
Ms. Hathaway has also been a partner in several glass studios in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, and has both studied and taught studied fused glass techniques extensively. She served as one of two jurors for the 2017 Tempe Festival of the Arts, and has done both choreography and performance with several noted modern dance companies. She has also taught movement and dance at all levels. Ms. Hathaway also studied oil and watercolor portraiture. She incorporates portraits as well as movement into her fused glass works.
Her works have been exhibited internationally, including Lithuania under the Arts in Embassies Program and in Egypt with an International Artists group (IASG). Her fused glass works are often presented in a series that interpret international settings and culture, such as her Song Lines series drawing upon Aboriginal boundary demarcations from the harmonic resonances produced by singers along the boundary of adjacent territories.
She has developed unique fused glass techniques to create large three dimensional works of glass that incorporate wire sculptures that form both the mold for a fused glass works and are often incorporated into the works.
Ms. Hathaway relocated from New Orleans, first studying abroad in France, and then in Washington, D.C. obtaining a Master of Arts degree in 1987 from George Washington University. Her concentration was in modern dance.