The road to Calvary presents the sad and dramatic procession along a wavy line that follows the slope of the mountain and has its fulcrum in the figure of the Madonna, bent under the weight of her pain and supported on the sides by two attentive white silhouettes, wandering ghosts in the light. Jesus, with his heavy load and his immense suffering, is higher, distant and invisible, imaginable only through the three women following the Virgin, who raise their heads towards the top to spy in terror on the torture of a son whom not even mother has more strength to assist. In the background, the sky opens into a very light and cruel blue against the gray clouds, it allows the gaze to breathe hardly at the horizon, hinting at the valley, and then leading it towards the winter geometry of trunks and dry branches, and again, descending, towards the boulders in the foreground floating on the shadow-soaked earth. The numerous religious paintings of this period are enriched with a feeling of nature foreign to the previous ones, with an earthly vitality expressed in the color that completes, strengthens and pacifies the mystical inspiration that the gaunt and rigid landscape emanates from every corner.