The pencil copies by Yulian Zaiats are based on two well-known paintings, each belonging to a different era and stylistic tradition. The first is a portrait of Yuliia Kustodiieva (born Proshynska) from an oil painting by Borys Kustodiiev, executed in tempera in 1915. In the original, the artist emphasises the model's refined beauty and balanced posture, using a rich palette and soft tone transitions. In Y. Zaiats' graphic version, colour is replaced by nuanced hatching, which conveys the depth of the gaze, the smoothness of the contours, and the inner dignity of the sitter. The second drawing portrait is an image of one of the elderly men from a group portrait of veterans of the stage from Oleksandr Laktionov's painting "Old Age Provided For" (1956–1960), created in the House of the All-Union Theatrical Society named after Oleksandra Yablochkina. In the original, the artist works realistically, paying attention to the texture of the faces and the psychological characteristics of the characters. In Y. Zaiats' interpretation, this image acquires a restrained black-and-white expressiveness, where age-related changes are combined with a confident gaze and chiaroscuro modelling, emphasising the model's experience and life story.