Pencil copies by Yulian Zaiats reproduce two frontal shoulder-length portraits by French artist Maurice Quentin de La Tour, transferring their refined pastel style into clear and nuanced graphics. The first is a portrait of the Roman composer Francesco Manelli. In the original, the soft pastel layers convey the noble expression of the face, the attentive gaze, and the slight theatricality of the figure, characteristic of Baroque musicians. In the graphic copy, these qualities are preserved through careful hatching, smooth modelling of chiaroscuro, and careful highlighting of facial features with a special emphasis on the eyes and mouth line. The second is a portrait (head) of Jean le Rond d'Alembert (1753), a renowned French encyclopedist, philosopher, mathematician, and mechanician. The original is distinguished by its intellectual concentration, which the artist emphasised with soft light and a restrained colour palette of pastels. In Y. Zaiats' version, this is embodied through subtle tonal gradation, clear form construction, and deep strokes that emphasise the inner energy of the subject, while maintaining academic precision and a sense of presence.