The reason you're running into trouble is because you're trying to have the pointer to a pointer, rather than just using an ordinary pointer. You want to access the pointer that is contained at the address pointed to by the first pointer. As it stands you're trying to access a member that is outside of the memory space of the original pointer's address (which is only as large as an address). And then you're running into trouble because you aren't initializing your array 'curr' either. Another thing I did that doesn't really matter but helps you understand pointers is made your array a pointer- which is how arrays work in C. The array is simply the address of the first member of the array, and when you index into the array, it just adds an offset to that address = index * sizeof(yourstruct).
What you want is
typedef struct {
struct1 *curr;
struct1 *start = NULL;
struct1 *end = NULL;
} struct2;
#define minSize 10
struct2* initialize()
{
struct2 *newBuf = (struct2 *) malloc(sizeof(struct2));
newBuf->curr = (struct1 *) malloc(sizeof(struct1) * minSize);
// set the start pointer
newBuf.curr[0] = newBuf->start;
newBuf.curr[0]->next = NULL;
for (int i = 1; i < minSize; i++)
{
struct1 *new = (struct1 *) malloc(sizeof(struct1));
newBuf.curr[i] = new;
newBuf.curr[i-1]->next = newBuf.curr[i];
}
// connect last index with first
newBuf.curr[minSize - 1]->next = newBuf.curr[0];
// set the end pointer
newBuf->end = newBuf->start;
return newBuf;
}