The drawing copy, created by Yulian Zaiats, depicts two bust-length portraits of men, united not only by similar physical attributes but also by the expressive psychological content of the images. The first is a realistic portrait of a currently unknown man wearing a hat, glasses, a beard, and a moustache, who sends a direct, attentive gaze directly at the viewer. The composition is constructed in a traditional double-portrait manner, with a clear emphasis on the faces. The linear contour conveys the structural precision of the form, while the hatching models the volume of the face and headdress. The chiaroscuro is reduced to a minimum, emphasising the intimate nature of the image, while the detail in the area of the glasses and moustache creates an individualised, easily recognisable image. The second is a portrait of the Austrian painter Carl Eduard Schuch wearing a hat, glasses, and a cigarette in his mouth, based on the original work by Wilhelm Maria Hubertus Leibl. Y. Zaiats accurately reproduces the characteristic depth of facial expression and concentration of gaze, which, unlike the first portrait, is perceived as more detached. The hat and glasses are accentuated and drawn as part of the artistic image, while the slightly tilted head and cigarette emphasise the ease of the pose. Both copies retain Y. Zaiats' characteristic attention to the individual plasticity of the face, the accuracy of proportions, and the clarity of the linear structure. Comparing these portraits within the same graphic sheet allows us to trace the differences in the psychological characteristics of the models: from the direct, almost dialogical gaze of the first character to the calm aloofness and inner reserve of Schuch's image.