Those big white circles on the wall on either side of his rack sure look like reflections of undiffused studio lights to me. Not to mention how well the room is flooded with light. Not the lighting of a typical Cyprus home, I'll wager.
Those are omni-directional wall-mounted light fixtures. The reason you can't see them and that they look like spotlights is because they're omni-directional design makes them cast light throughout the room, lighting everything slightly but not very effectively. In order to expose the room correctly, an exposure is required that will bring out the details of what is not that well lit, which is mostly everything in the room; the result of this is that while the room is exposed properly, the light fixtures are completely blown out and appear as white spots.
An undiffused studio light would cast very clear shadows in the room, but as you can tell the shadows are fairly soft which eliminates this possibility for me. In addition, everything in the room is softly lit without harsh shadows, which is usually a telling sign of ambient light being used.
Also, if you look at the way shadows are cast in the room, they are basically all coming from those wall-mounted lights. Look at the last picture on the bottom and this is fairly clear if you look at the shadow of the hanging bird; if there were spotlights in the room lighting up those areas where the wall fixtures are, there would be secondary shadows of the bird cast somewhere in the area of where the fire-place looking corner of the room is. These shadows would come directly from the light coming off the spotlights, not from the reflected light. Or so my theory goes, anyways.