Type Sculpture Artist Brian Borrello Year 2003 | Subject Trees Created 2003 | |
![]() | ||
Medium Stainless steelLED lights Similar Terra Incognita, Streetcar Stop for Portland, Ideals, Capitalism, Korean Temple Bell |
Second growth in the silicon forest
Silicon Forest, sometimes referred to as The Silicon Forest, is an outdoor 2003 sculpture by Brian Borrello, installed near the Interstate/Rose Quarter MAX Station in Portland, Oregon's Lloyd District, in the United States.
Contents
- Second growth in the silicon forest
- Jobs in silicon forest 52 limited
- Description and reception
- References
Jobs in silicon forest 52 limited
Description and reception
Brian Borrello's Silicon Forest (2003) is an abstract sculpture made of stainless steel and light-emitting diode (LED) lights, installed at the Interstate/Rose Quarter MAX Station in Portland's Lloyd District. It depicts a series of trees with thin trunks and cone-shaped foliage. The piece has been called a "three-part metaphor for displacement and change". The solar artwork's steel trees illuminate using electricity powered by solar panels.
In 2013, Solar Power World's Frank Andorka ranked the sculpture third in his list of "11 Must-See Art Installations, Inspired by Solar Panels".