The sheet features a bust-length portrait of a young woman, executed in graphite pencil in a restrained, realistic manner characteristic of the author's mature phase of work. The work, dated 1961, is distinguished by its combination of academic precision and individual observation. The model's type is reminiscent of the cinema images of the 1960s: delicate features, a smoothly outlined oval face, and long, combed hair with strands. Visually reminiscent of Natalia Seleznova (1964) or the American actress Shirley Jones in her younger years. This is a light, "cinematic" type with a combination of freshness, delicacy, and inner peace. The drawing focuses on the face and shoulder line, which are outlined with a confident yet subtly modulated line. Soft strokes form a chiaroscuro modelling that allows for convincing plasticity without losing sophistication. The tonal transitions are executed with extreme care, on the verge of visibility, with clearly controlled saturation. The main focus is on the expression in her eyes and her slight smile, which give off a sense of inner light, intelligence, and openness. The drawing doesn't have a busy background: the space around the portrait is left blank, which draws attention to the face and keeps the viewer's gaze on the emotional centre of the composition. At the same time, the absence of a background enhances the effect of portrait "isolation," a characteristic of graphic studies, where the primary focus is not on context but on form and character. Despite the obvious similarity to the cinematic canon of female beauty of the 1960s, the author does not reduce the image to a glossy template. On the contrary, the drawing retains a sense of living presence, a holistic inner state, in which the psychological intention to convey not only the appearance but also the subtle mood of the moment is traced. The work demonstrates complete mastery of the academic school of drawing and, at the same time, attests to the personal intonation of a mature artist, attentive to nature but free in interpretation, capable of combining plastic clarity with the lyrical sound of the image.