Along with portraits of burghers and noblemen, images of clergymen were significant in Ukrainian painting. They were painted according to the canonical scheme in the clothes of churchmen of a certain rank. Images of prominent church figures, namely metropolitans, archbishops, and representatives of the clerical elite, were introduced into the portrait gallery. The works were often painted in restrained colours, without excessive decorativeness, giving them extraordinary expressiveness and attention to the faces and characters depicted. The portrait of an Armenian clergyman is painted in contrasting colours, with dominating black, rich red, and white. The artist accurately showed the person's features, notably a plump dark-skinned face framed by thick black hair, a large nose, big eyes, and wide black eyebrows. The image is painted planarly and in detail, which is typical of the painting style of provincial artists.