Sean Clark Archive
30 Years on the Web
This is page is a work in progress. My goal is to finish the archiving, indexing, fixing and checking of all of my past websites ready for some sort of retrospective exhibition/event in October 2023 - thirty years after I published my first site. After this, I will be in a position to make sense of what I've actually been up to all this time and will work on a connecting narrative. If I need to credit you for any work I've uploaded here please let me know.
Black links go to pages in archive.seanclark.org. Blue links to www.seanclark.org. Red links go to websites that have yet to be put in the archive.
31/1/21 - seanclark.me.uk and www.interactdigitalarts.uk are now in the archive. Some link corrections and redirects may still be needed.
23/1/21 - A version of the Interact Labs site from 2016 is now in the archive.
22/1/21 - nemeton.com was registered 25 years ago today.
20/1/21 - The archive currently contains 2528 web pages.
1/1/21 - archive.senaclark.org has been created. All existing materials uploaded.
Current Work
2015 - 2020
2010 - 2014
2005 - 2010
2000 - 2005
1996 - 2000
1989 - 1996
The work shown here mostly took place while I was a graduate researcher at Loughborough University between 1989 and 1995. I created a website about Virtual Reality in 1993, which brought me to the attention of Colin Angus from The Shamen and I worked with them on interesting projects over the following five years. When I moved from Loughborough to Derby University in 1995 I co-founded arts-group Resonance with Geoff Broadway, Noel Douglas and Jayne Murray and then web-design company DRC Internet. Resonance did a lot of events with Birmingham club Oscillate, but I didn't manage to document that many of them. Likewise, DRCI did more work than is shown here. However, I still managed to hold on to quite a bit of web work from this time and wrote for lots of magazines in the mid-1990s - most of which i still have copies of. So, all in all. I have a pretty decent record of the era.
I am keen to interview people who were involved in these projects and other early creative internet activities in the UK. Contact me on sean@seanclark.org if you are interested in talking.