Borubaeva started her artistic career in Moscow, where she lived for four years before returning to Bishkek. Her art often focused on social issues, particularly those that had an impact on the environment, such as
food production,
labour, migration, and
urbanisation. Borubaeva is known for her use of rubbish in her art, and in 2009 co-founded the TRASH Environmental Art Festival, which she continues to serve as co-curator of. Borubaeva has completed residencies at different institutions, including the
Hyde Park Art Center in
Chicago,
United States; the
Ujazdowski Castle Centre for Contemporary Art in
Warsaw,
Poland; the Kunstraum Dreiviertel in
Bern,
Switzerland; and the Vadim Sidur Museum in Moscow. In 2011, she curated the educational programme for the Bishkek presentation that was displayed at the Lingua Franca exhibition at the Central Asian Pavilion during the
54th Venice Biennale in
Venice,
Italy. Borubaeva has criticised the Kyrgyz government's repression of dissent following the passing of a law in 2022 that temporarily imposed a court-sanctioned ban on protests being held in many public places, including government buildings, that had been routinely extended by the government. In December 2025, Borubaeva and fellow activist
Tolekan Ismailova filed a petition with the
Constitutional Court, requesting that it declare provisions that permitted local governments to restrict the time, location and route of rallies and protests as "unconstitutional". At 10:00
KGT on 13 March 2026, Borubaeva and Ismailova, alongside filmmaker Bulat Satarkulov, were arrested in Bishkek while travelling to a planned peaceful protest in the Pervomaiskii district against the government's ban on freedom of assembly with signs reading "Right to Peaceful Assembly" (). Borubaeva was arrested despite it being alleged that the Kyrgyz authorities only had summons papers for Ismailova. After being detained for six hours at the Main Department of Internal Affairs of Bishkek, all three were released. The
Ireland-based human rights organisation
Front Line Defenders condemned the arrests of Borubaeva and Ismailova, describing them as a "reprisal for their non-violent and legitimate human rights work". == Recognition ==