SALA Festival 2025 at Transforma

Welcome Home – How Art Personalises Space

There’s something quietly powerful about walking into a space that feels distinctly yours. It’s not just the furniture, the light, or the layout—it’s the art. It’s what makes a space personal.

This August, as part of the South Australian Living Artists Festival, Transforma invites you to experience Welcome Home—an exhibition that explores how art shapes the character of our interiors.

Featuring evocative works on canvas by Lola Bezor, and sculptural pieces by Peter Syndicas, the exhibition celebrates individuality through art. Each piece offers a different rhythm, colour, and emotion—welcoming us not just into a home, but into a story.

Art is never merely decoration. It reflects our tastes, our memories, and often, our aspirations. At Transforma, where personal expression sits at the heart of every interior, Welcome Home is both a celebration and an invitation—to curate a space that speaks in your voice.

Lola Bezor
Lola Bezor, Coral, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 1650 x 2000mm

About Lola Bezor

Lola creates abstract works that speak in colour, gesture, and quiet emotion. Rooted in intuitive mark-making, her process is both spontaneous and reflective—guided by memory, mood, and the textures of daily life. Each piece begins without a fixed destination, unfolding in layers that echo the fluid, often nonlinear way we experience the world.

Inspired by the natural palette of her Adelaide surroundings, she seeks to evoke rather than define, allowing viewers to find their own narratives within the work.

Lola's work is held in both corporate and private collections throughout Australia.

Peter Syndicas
Peter Syndicas, Celestial Life Form, 2024 – 25 Bronze, LED lighting 11 x 2.9 x 3m. Commissioned by Burnside Village. Photograph Ben Kelly

About Peter Syndicas

For over 28 years, Peter Syndicas has been creating abstract figurative sculptures inspired by the intricate patterns found in plant life. His artistic journey began with the chance discovery of a simple twig that echoed the contours of the human form—an encounter that sparked an enduring exploration of the figurative within organic fractals. Twigs—fragile and shaped by the elements—became the starting point for larger works translated into bronze, steel, and stone, offering a compelling contrast to their natural delicacy.

Over time, Syndicas has refined his craft across a range of mediums and, more recently, developed a passion for working with Australian stone—particularly South Australian marbles, granites, and stromatolites. Today, he continues to explore the geometry of nature, drawing endless inspiration from the landscape around him.

Peter’s work is represented by galleries throughout Australia and held in private collections worldwide.