Andrew Moore’s photographic series captures the haunting grandeur of abandoned theaters across the United States and other countries, revealing ornate architectural details that speak to an era when cinema palaces were designed as temples of entertainment. His images document spaces where gilt moldings, frescoed ceilings, and velvet curtains now decay in silence, transforming these forgotten venues into studies of time’s passage and cultural shifts. The photographer’s approach emphasizes the theatrical quality inherent in the structures themselves, allowing peeling paint and collapsed seats to narrate stories of former glory.
Moore’s work emerged from his long-standing fascination with how buildings absorb and reflect the communities they serve, a theme he has explored throughout his career, photographing Detroit’s ruins and Cuban architecture. These theater photographs resist simple nostalgia by presenting abandonment as both loss and transformation, where nature reclaims ornamental spaces and light filters through broken windows to illuminate what remains. His large-format camera captures textures with forensic precision, rendering each crack in plaster and rust stain as evidence of decades passing.
More info: Website, Instagram (h/t: Colossal).







