In the centre of the composition, the painting depicts Madonna sitting with Jesus on her lap. There is a radiant halo around Christ's head. Around them, the following figures are depicted: in the foreground on the left, a seated figure of a saint with their back to the viewer, and on the right, a figure of a saint with his hands together in prayer. Possibly, this is Saint Bernard. In the background, amidst billowing clouds, a white dove with radiance (a symbol of the Holy Spirit) is depicted, with figures of cupids above it. Saint Bernard came from a noble family. At the age of twenty, he joined the Cistercian order, where he became known for his asceticism. In 1115, he founded a monastery in Clairvaux, where he became an abbot. Bernard of Clairvaux adhered to a mystical direction in theology. He actively fought against heresies and freethought, wrote the first rule for spiritual chivalric orders, and introduced a special devotion to the Virgin Mary, which led to depictions of him adoring the Virgin Mary and Child. The painting was received from the Lviv City Gallery collection as "Apotheosis of the Madonna" but was later reattributed as "Saint Bernard Adoring the Virgin Mary with Child".