This vertical painting depicts a male half-length portrait against a conventional background. The complex purple colour, which changes to blue, radiates from the figure. The figure of a young man with a thick, short hairstyle is painted in frontal view, his head resting on the bent hand of his left arm. The portrayed person is wearing a red-brown jumper, probably of coarse knit. The geometric stylisation of the face is remarkable. It is divided into separate figures that emphasise the natural structure of the human head and hand (more complex and decorative than Houdon's sculptural technique). This approach is a clear result of the artist's exposure to the practices of the modernist movement, especially the avant-garde (e.g. Oleksandr Bohomazov), and is unique to the local scene in which the artist was working at the time. To the right of the portrait is a stylised flower, probably a rose. In the upper right corner is a paper reproduction of the famous work by Simone Martini, "The Virgin of the Annunciation" (1340–1344, State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, Russian Federation).