The work depicts a horizontal rectangular sketch from a currently unidentified park area. The performance is consistent with realistic and impressionistic painting practices; there is a study of colour and textures. Exceptionally close to this work by Arnold Sharhorodskyi is the canvas "Belveder" (1944) by the Czech artist Jan Bauch. The colour is cold and with tonal accents. A pond with a well-kept recreation area is depicted in the foreground. In the depth of the composition, there is a currently unidentified architectural object with columns on the facade. Such places with similar types of park zones were common throughout the USSR, particularly in the territory of the Ukrainian SSR. For example, similar motifs in landscape design can be found in the arboretums "Sofiyivka" (Uman, founded between 1796 and 1802) and "Oleksandriya" (Bila Tserkva, 1793). However, there are no preconditions to assert exactly where the sketch was made, considering the possible transformations of the building's colour and approach to artistic stylisation. In general, the work is characterised by a thorough approach. The author paid attention not to the naturalistic representation but the recreation of the autumn park's specific, somewhat melancholic atmosphere.