The painting Pascolo, also known under the titles Ultimi pastoli or High mountain landscape with cows, dates back to around 1904 and probably represents a panorama of the Vigezzo or Ticinese Valley, even if, especially in the large format, Fornara usually creates views made up of disparate realities, elaborated in any case on the truth and then reunited in the final composition. The canvas is structured through a solid formal structure divided into three wide horizontal bands, the part of the pasture in the shade, in the lower area, meadows and mountains bathed by the last sun, in the intermediate one, the sky streaked with white, above. In the foreground on the left stands a peaceful cow which is echoed by other more distant cattle, presences introduced out of sympathy and as falling within the very order of nature. The suggestive brightness of the pasture at sunset, punctuated in clear portions of light and shadow, conceived in rhythmic vertical strokes to reproduce the blades of grass in the foreground, and horizontal to determine the undulation of the meadows in the middle one, reaches the he apex in the treatment of the peaks in the background, where the shattered and rich brushwork is oriented in opposite directions to recreate the variety of rocks, vegetation, snow-capped peaks.