Visit Father Kallanikos at the Ayia Varvara monastery at the foot of Stavrovouni mountain. This 90-odd year old is a genius and a legend and has taught most of the recognised icon-painters on the island. He has had pupils coming from all over Orthodoxy.
Some of the most valued 20th c icons were painted by the three brothers (family) and monks who painted at the Ayios Varnavas monastery near Salamis/Engomi, in the occupied area. The monastery chapel is now an icon museum while the other buildings house a reasonably good collection of antiquities. In the southern apse of the chapel there is an important series of frescos, painted by the brothers, illustrating the discovery of the body of St Barnabas at the site and the presentation of the apostolic gospel found with it to the Byzantine Emperor Zeno in Constantinople, in return for which the Cyprus Archbishop was granted autocephaly of the Cypriot church, strong political powers and the right to sign in imperial purple ink, rights which exist to this day. Unfortunately, the frescos were painted with unsuitable materials and are now in need of expert restoration. The photo shows the fresco, in its present state, of the presentation of the gospel to Zeno. Note that the frescos were not damaged by Turkish invaders but simply by time. I also have a photo of the same fresco I took in 1952, in black and white, when it was still fresh.