Kazimiera Malaczynska-Pajzderska's oeuvre has a dual figurative and plastic genesis; it is marked by the inspiration of the Secession, the plastic insights of A. Rodin, and modernised readings of classicist traditions, probably influenced by A. Bourdelle. "The Bust of a Man" ("Man's Torso"), created in 1910, is an example of the latter. Exhibited at the General Exhibition of Polish Art in Lviv in 1910, the sculpture is probably a portrait of the 22-year-old Polish painter, teacher and art critic Tadeusz Pruszkowski, whom the author met in Paris during the period when both artists were there. The influence of classical and academic traditions on the figurative and plastic approach to the work is evident in the resonances with Roman busts, particularly Antinous, in modelling a powerful naked torso and the inclination of the head. At the same time, the expressiveness of Kazimiera Malaczynska-Pajzderska's creative style is evident in the emphasised asymmetry, energetic shaping, surface texture, and resulting play of light and shadow. The careful reproduction of individual features contrasts the antiquated torso.