A pencil drawing on paper shows a lifelike portrait of a girl (probably 3–3.5 years old) sitting in a chair with a wooden back and padded seat. The child is wearing a dress with a turn-down collar, her medium-length hair is tied in two "ponytails" with two narrow satin (?) ribbons, and she is wearing short socks with a corrugated top. The expression on the girl's face suggests that she had been posing for some time and was tired. This type of life model drawing was quite common, both in the sense of preparation and during the actual artistic training. For example, Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin (1878–1939) made consonant drawings of children and young men (Ф.Шар.Арх.ЛКГ-48) at various stages of his artistic training (a drawing of a child with a teddy bear in 1926, ink illustrations in 1932, or life drawings in 1937). The theme of posing children is reflected quite thoroughly in the well-known diaries and notes of the avant-garde artist Alisa Poret (1902–1984), a student of Kuzma Petrov-Vodkin, who worked for a long time (from 1920 to the 1980s) on the design of children's books and magazines.