Sattar Bahlulzade was born on 15 December 1909 in the village of
Amirjan near
Baku. He was the third child in the family after two elder sisters. Sattar developed a love for painting in his early childhood. After his father bought him colored pencils, Sattar drew everything around him - the
Novruz holiday, Kos-kosa dances, children jumping over bonfires as part of the Novruz tradition, etc. Being surrounded by objects of folklore art - colorful carpets woven by his mother and grandmother, jewelry, as well as ceramics and copper dishes passed down from generation to generation - Sattar began to cultivate a love for art. In one of his diaries, the artist wrote:
"Everything had its own special place in the house. Mother arranged the dishes like an artist. She folded the blankets and beddings in a way that the color schemes matched. For her, it was a work of art, it was beauty." At school, Sattar was fond of the poems of
Nizami Ganjavi,
Vagif, and
Khaqani, but most of all, he was inspired by the poetry of
Fuzuli and the characters in his version of the famous poem
Layla and Majnun. He depicted these characters on the covers of his notebooks. His teachers liked Sattar's work, one of them telling him, "there is only one path forward for you, Sattar, and that is to become an artist." Bahlulzade's music teacher was the composer
Muslim Magomayev, the grandfather of the iconic Soviet Azerbaijani singer
Muslim Magomayev. After graduating in 1931, he began working with
Azim Azimzade for the newspaper "Communist" as a graphic illustrator. Bahlulzade worked in the editorial office for two years, during which his first works of art, cartoons, were published. In 1933, began studying at the
Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture, where he became a student of
Vladimir Favorsky. It is at this Institute that Bahlulzade started showing interest in landscape painting. His frequent summer trips to Crimea played an important role in developing his mastery of landscape art. There, Bahlulzade realized that painting really was his true purpose and path in life. == Career ==