"Self-Portrait", probably a sketch, is one of the author's early paintings from the period of her studies at the Munich Academy. The figurative solution of the work is based on the ideology of feminism, which was established in the culture of the early twentieth century, and on the peculiarities of the philosophy of the artist, who was selfless in her professional life. In contrast to the later, majestically static, fresco-monumental "Self-Portrait in the Shrine" (1923), this painting is characterised by impressionistic improvisation, broad, free brushstrokes, and subtle nuances in the dense olive-grey and olive-ochre tones. Strength of character and will are conveyed by the rapid three-quarter turn of the shoulders, the fluttering of the hair, and the independent gaze of the large brown eyes fixed on the observer. The expressiveness of the silhouette, accentuated by the silver-golden background, is typical of many of Drexler's sculptures.