Phillip BuehlerStaircase
About the Item
- Creator:Phillip Buehler (American)
- Dimensions:Height: 20 in (50.8 cm)Width: 24 in (60.96 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:New York, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU6921011163
Phillip Buehler
The photographer Phillip Buehler has devoted his career to exploring obsolete sites, what he calls “modern ruins.” Captured in states of evocative decay, his subjects have included an abandoned psychiatric asylum, a Cold War missile silo and an offline power plant.
In late 2019, Buehler's body of work on view in the exhibition “Mallrat to Snapchat: The End of the Third Place” — at Front Room Gallery, in New York — may have elicited more nostalgia than the others. It was a look at New Jersey’s defunct Wayne Hills Mall and, by extension, at the dying culture of middle-class suburban shopping centers across the country.
"I started photographing abandoned places the same year the mall opened, 1973, when I was a senior in high school," Buehler told The Study. "At the time, New York was falling apart, with empty piers and abandoned or burned-out buildings everywhere. Back then, nobody was photographing them, so I had no art references — most were cinematic. Two films released in 1968 made a big impression on me: 2001: A Space Odyssey and Planet of the Apes."
Browse a collection of Phillip Buehler's photography on 1stDibs.
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- Vietnam B-52By Phillip BuehlerLocated in New York, NY24"x30" will photograph, signed and editioned on reverse. (edition of 5) This photograph is from a series entitled, “(UN)THINKABLE,” the culmination of 25 years of Phillip Buehler’s work photographing remnants of the Cold War throughout the United States and Europe. Buehler has visited NATO airbases, Cape Canaveral, the Airplane Graveyard, missile bunkers and silos (even within New York City’s borders) among many other sites that are historic, and yet hidden, forbidden, and forgotten. Photographs from this series will be featured in a solo exhibition this September at the Front Room Gallery. For anyone growing up during the Cold War the sense of dread of the world’s annihilation was all to concrete. It was evidenced in films like “Dr. Strangelove” and “The Day After.” Everyone knew the U.S. had enough nuclear weapons to destroy the world 5 times over, and assumed something similar about the Russians. For those not old enough to remember this built in fear, don’t worry (worry) it is reawakening. We don’t need another Cuban Missile Crisis to push us to the brink, the renewed tension with the Russians, and now North Korea’s recent entry in the nuclear weapons club is more than enough to unnerve anyone who is watching these conflicts unfold. Phillip Buehler is watching closely. Through this comprehensive series Buehler’s photos show many aspects of this non-war war. In Buehler’s aerial photographs from a military airplane storage yard in Arizona the repetition of the same model of bomber aircraft are so abstractly pattern-based that the overall effect beginnings to feel like a Middle Eastern...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- "Atrium" large scale color photograph, Wayne Hills Mall (Modern Ruins) framedBy Phillip BuehlerLocated in New York, NYlimited edition of 5, signed on reverse by the artist, Phillip Buehler. This photograph has a kaleidoscope feel in the geometric pattern of blue clouded sky tiles and salmon coral diamond paneling. It captures the view of the open panel ceiling of the atrium in the abandoned Wayne Hills Mall...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- "Waldenbooks" Wayne Hills Mall, New Jersey (Modern Ruins) color photographBy Phillip BuehlerLocated in New York, NYlimited edition of 5, signed on reverse by the artist, Phillip Buehler. The shuttered gate of Waldenbooks appears as an ineffectual effort in the dilapidated scene captured by Phillip Buehler. The once brilliant sign has been removed, yet you can see the aura of the letters, appearing as black signage against a grey-black surface. Debris and trash litter the flooded corridor, creating a errie feeling. This photograph is a featured in a solo exhibition of Phillip Buehler's photographs, entitled: “Mallrat to Snapchat: The End of the Third Place.” Front Room Gallery is proud to present “Mallrat to Snapchat: The End of the Third Place,” on view November 29th - January 12th. January recent work by photographer Phillip Buehler documenting the death of the Wayne Hills Mall...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- "Sam Goody Exterior" Wayne Hills Mall (from Modern Ruins series) photographBy Phillip BuehlerLocated in New York, NYlimited edition of 5, signed on reverse by the artist, Phillip Buehler. This photograph depicts what remains of the of the Sam Goody entrance at the deserted Wayne Hills Mall, in Wayne, New Jersey. The prominent sign to the entrance of the mall, has been removed yet, there is still the vaguely visible lettering on the grand entrance to the closed retailer. Phillip Buehler captures the last stages of the life of the once bustling mall, with the empty corridors and dilapidated storefronts and kiosks. This photograph is a featured in a solo exhibition of Phillip Buehler's photographs, entitled: “Mallrat to Snapchat: The End of the Third Place.” Front Room Gallery is proud to present “Mallrat to Snapchat: The End of the Third Place,” on view November 29th - January 12th. January recent work by photographer Phillip Buehler documenting the death of the Wayne Hills Mall in Wayne, New Jersey. This is Buehler’s second solo show at Front Room Gallery. Buehler’s exhibition is part photography, part installation, part cultural critique, mixed in with nostalgia and genuine affection for this very American economical and sociological experiment— The Mall. Buehler takes a very intimate look at the beginning, and possibly ending, of mall culture in the United States featuring not only photographs, but also artifacts from the mall and its opening year, 1973. Under a photograph of a desolate Sam Goody will be a bin filled with almost 100 albums from that year, that visitors can flip through and play in the gallery on a vintage record player...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- "Courtyard" Wayne Hills Mall, New Jersey (Modern Ruins) color photographBy Phillip BuehlerLocated in New York, NYlimited edition of 5, signed on reverse by the artist, Phillip Buehler. A view of the crumbling panel ceiling of the courtyard in the abandoned Wayne Hills Mall...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- "Sound-a-Rama" Former Wayne Hills Mall (Modern Ruins) color photographBy Phillip BuehlerLocated in New York, NYlimited edition of 5, signed on reverse by the artist, Phillip Buehler. This photograph depicts the time ravaged former "Sound-a-Rama" storefront in the abandoned Wayne Hills Mall, in Wayne, New Jersey. A sign still hangs in the dilapidated and vacant store awning. The shop's waterlogged ceiling has collapsed, and pools of water have formed along the once busy hallway of the mall. This photograph is a featured in a solo exhibition of Phillip Buehler's photographs, entitled: “Mallrat to Snapchat: The End of the Third Place.” Front Room Gallery is proud to present “Mallrat to Snapchat: The End of the Third Place,” on view November 29th - January 12th. January recent work by photographer Phillip Buehler documenting the death of the Wayne Hills Mall in Wayne, New Jersey. This is Buehler’s second solo show at Front Room Gallery. Buehler’s exhibition is part photography, part installation, part cultural critique, mixed in with nostalgia and genuine affection for this very American economical and sociological experiment— The Mall. Buehler takes a very intimate look at the beginning, and possibly ending, of mall culture in the United States featuring not only photographs, but also artifacts from the mall and its opening year, 1973. Under a photograph of a desolate Sam Goody will be a bin filled with almost 100 albums from that year, that visitors can flip through and play in the gallery on a vintage record player. Buehler’s photos of iconic hangouts and lowbrow teenage meeting places ring out from the 1970’s, 80’s, and 90’s but are torn away from their movie soundtracks and sent into an apocalyptic icy future. Featuring Sam Goody, Waldenbooks, Toys R Us...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- Hedge MazeBy Greg LotusLocated in New York City, NYGreg Lotus Hedge Maze, 2018 Fashion Photography Greg Lotus is an American fashion photographer based between Miami and New York. His work can be found regularly in the pages of Ital...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- Mask IBy Greg LotusLocated in New York City, NYGreg Lotus Mask I, 2018 Fashion Photography Greg Lotus is an American fashion photographer based between Miami and New York. His work can be found regularly in the pages of Italian ...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- PieBy Greg LotusLocated in New York City, NYGreg Lotus Pie, 2014 Fashion Photography Greg Lotus is an American fashion photographer based between Miami and New York. His work can be found regularly in the pages of Italian Vog...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- VersaceBy Greg LotusLocated in New York City, NYGreg Lotus is an American fashion photographer based between Miami and New York. His work can be found regularly in the pages of Italian Vogue, Vanity Fair, GQ, L'Uomo Vogue, and so ...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- EggBy Greg LotusLocated in New York City, NYGreg Lotus Egg, 2018 Fashion Photography Greg Lotus is an American fashion photographer based between Miami and New York. His work can be found regularly in the pages of Italian Vog...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment
- Champagne PoodleBy Greg LotusLocated in New York City, NYGreg Lotus Champagne Poodle, 2014 Fashion Photography Greg Lotus is an American fashion photographer based between Miami and New York. His work can be found regularly in the pages o...Category
2010s Contemporary Color Photography
MaterialsArchival Pigment