The graphic portrait is created using the technique of ink drawing with a pen, which is typical of academic drawing from the early twentieth century. The composition has a chamber-like, yet psychologically intense character: a middle-aged man with a high forehead, moustache, and deep gaze, facing the viewer in three-quarters, holds a cigarette in his right hand. The work is signed by the author. This is a copy of a work that has not yet been identified (the reading of the signature requires clarification), dated January 15, 1919. This gives the image not only historical but also documentary significance, indicating the possible educational or studio origin of the drawing. The drawing is executed with a confident hand, with a high degree of mastery of the hatching technique. The author uses cross-hatching both to model volume and to create a rhythmic background that enhances the facial expression. The face is painted with special attention to anatomical accuracy, while maintaining a slight conventionality, especially in the depiction of the nose, eyelids and forehead. The gaze of the portrait subject – focused, almost stern – creates an internal tension in the image, taking it beyond the limits of a simple sketch. The gesture of the hand deserves special attention: it is atypical for a classical portrait, almost stage-like, perhaps symbolic. Given the date, the drawing could have been created in the context of academic studies at a European art school, where great importance was attached to the ability to convey character through facial expressions, plasticity, and rhythm of line. The presence of a signature and date makes this drawing suitable for further research in the context of the history of art education, the author's personality, and potential models. The gesture of the hand with the cigarette can also have iconographic connotations. At the same time, a certain softness of the features and concentration of the gaze preserve the humanity of the image, avoiding cold detachment. This drawing is an example of a fine graphic work that embodies the skills of anatomical drawing, a deep understanding of the psychology of the image, and the ability to derive a type from an individual portrait. In combination with the previous drawing of a woman, this portrait can testify to the author's skill as a portraitist and an attentive observer of human faces and characters. On the reverse side is a fragment of a drawing of a woman wearing a hat with a wide brim.