Floral compositions by Sughra Baghirzada

Floristry & Visual Art

The Language of Flowers

Over 200 compositions. Exhibitions across three continents. A lifelong devotion to the beauty of living things.

For Sughra Baghirzada, flowers are not decoration — they are a medium of expression as precise and personal as any brushstroke or line of dialogue. Since 2004, as a member of the World Flower Council, she has created more than 200 floral compositions and exhibited her work across Latvia, Russia, France, Malaysia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, Croatia, Japan, and China.

200+

Floral compositions created

Member of the World Flower Council since 2004

Membership

World Flower Council

In 2004, Sughra Baghirzada became a member of the World Flower Council — the first and only representative of the Turkic-speaking world to hold this distinction. The Council brings together master florists from across the globe, and her membership is a recognition of both her technical mastery and her unique artistic vision, rooted in the cultural traditions of Azerbaijan.

First representative of the Turkic-speaking world

Selected Works

Floral composition
Floral compositionFresh floristry
Seasonal arrangement
Seasonal arrangementFresh floristry
Dramatic still life
Dramatic still lifeFresh floristry
Botanical study
Botanical studyFresh floristry
Exhibition installation
Exhibition installationFresh floristry
Painterly composition
Painterly compositionVisual art

International Exhibitions

🇱🇻Latvia
🇷🇺Russia
🇫🇷France
🇲🇾Malaysia
🇳🇿New Zealand
🇬🇧United Kingdom
🇭🇷Croatia
🇯🇵Japan
🇨🇳China

Painting & Visual Work

Visual Art

Alongside her floristry, Sughra Baghirzada is a member of the Union of Artists of Azerbaijan. Her paintings carry the same warmth and contemplative depth as her floral work — a visual language shaped by six decades of observation, performance, and a deep love of beauty in all its forms.

Member, Union of Artists of Azerbaijan
"A flower is a conversation between the earth and the light. My work is simply to listen, and to arrange what I hear."

— Sughra Baghirzada