ĚÇĐÄÍřŇł°ć

05 March 2025

Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert is a visual artist, researcher and a professor at the Cyprus University of Technology. Her research and artistic practice focus on museum studies and visual sociology, with a particularly emphasis on photography and emerging technologies.

Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert. Photographer: Celine Moniot

The Moa Martinson and Tage Danielsson professorships at Linköping University are intended for researchers in the humanities and social sciences, or those active in the arts. The professorship programmes aim to uphold values such as culture, humanism, and social commitment. These are values powerfully embodied by the cherished Swedish authors and artists Moa Martinson and Tage Danielsson.

Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert is looking forward to starting her professorship in the autumn semester of 2025:

I am thrilled and honoured to have been awarded the Moa Martinson Visiting Professorship at Linköping University. This prestigious opportunity will allow me to engage with the faculty and students of the Department of Culture and Society (IKOS), foster meaningful intellectual exchanges, expand my artistic practice, and focus on writing my book titled Re-framing Archaeology: Colonial Photographic Archives and Museums.

Theopisti Stylianou-Lambert is appointed to the Moa Martinson Professorship for 2025-2026. During her time at Linköping University, she will be writing a monograph, working on an exhibition, and conducting seminars.

She is the author of “The Political Museum” and editor of “Museums and Technologies of Presence”, “Museums and Emerging Technologies: Mediating Difficult Heritage”, “Museums and Visitor Photography”, “Museums and Photography: Displaying Death”, and “Photography and Cyprus: Time, Place and Identity”.

Latest news from LiU

A couple of people sitting at a desk in front of a computer.

How childhood liver tumor cells acquire different features

Researchers have discovered how the so called Wnt signaling pathway can result in tumor cells with different features within a single tumor. Their findings contribute to better classification of these tumors.

En närbild av en man som bär glasögon.

David Engblom wins award for his research on how our brains make us feel ill

David Engblom, Professor of Neurobiology, is awarded the 2026 Onkel Adam Prize for outstanding research at the Faculty of Medicine. He researches the role of the brain in making us feel ill in various medical conditions.

Woman at office.

Biogenic carbon dioxide could become a key resource as biogas expands

During the production and upgrading of biogas, carbon dioxide is released, a greenhouse gas that affects the climate. However, research at ĚÇĐÄÍřŇł°ć shows that this carbon dioxide has several uses and could become an important resource.