In 1976, his friend Bill Heine invited Buckley to design the sculptural fixtures on the Penultimate Picture Palace.[2] For the facade Buckley chose a dramatic figure reminiscent of Al Jolson with outstretched hands.[3]Mae West's lips were the inspiration for the cinema's door handles and, somewhat later Buckley would erect a male and a female figure above the toilet entrances, whimsically named Pearl and Dean.
The "Headington Shark" was erected on the 41st anniversary of the dropping of the atomic bomb on Nagasaki. Made of fibreglass on the farm near Wallingford, Oxfordshire where he was based, the shark itself weighs 203 kilograms and is 25 feet long. Buckley regards it as an integral part of "Untitled 1986" or "Shark House", a work of "Mixed Media, Brick, slates, wood, metal, polyester resin, glass, plaster, oil paint, lace curtaining and window boxes……."[5]
In the village of Checkendon in South Oxfordshire is his public work 'The Nuba Survival' which features two giant skeletons embracing each other.[6] The piece was created in 2001 after he visited the Nuba peoples in Sudan.[7]