Yulian Zaiats' drawing copy, based on Vasyl Polenov's painting "Christ and the Woman Taken in Adultery (He That Is Without Sin?)" (1888), depicts two elderly men who, in the original, stand in the foreground on the left and in front of Jesus Christ, accusing a woman who has sinned. In Y. Zaiats' presentation, the figures retain the recognisable iconography of V. Polenov, but are interpreted in his characteristic graphic manner: the volumes are constructed with lines, reinforced by locally applied hatching, which gives the figures relief. He rejects the painterly multilayeredness and chiaroscuro nuances of the oil original, instead creating a more generalised, intimate composition dominated by clear contour lines and an emphasis on gestures and facial expressions. Both figures retain their typological characteristics, and Y. Zaiats particularly vividly conveys the texture of the clothing through rhythmic, almost decorative strokes, which simultaneously form volume and emphasise the plasticity of the folds. As a result, this copy is not a literal repetition of V. Polenov's canvas, but rather its graphic stylisation, where the psychological drama of the characters is conveyed through restrained but eloquent lines, and the scene itself acquires greater emotional concentration due to the absence of secondary background details.