The picture depicts the meeting of the Virgin Mary and St. Elizabeth, a common motif in Dutch religious painting. This biblical story tells about Mary's visit to her older cousin Elizabeth after the Annunciation, who was also pregnant with John the Baptist. In the artwork, the Virgin Mary is holding St. Elizabeth's hand. Through the rock with a grotto depicted behind women, one can see a pilgrim with a servant pointing his hand at two saints. An essential element of the work is a landscape with a valley and rocky hills. Human figures appear only as an addition to it. The landscape is executed in brown-green tones that smoothly turn into blue-green ones, creating the impression of spatial depth. Such a colouristic solution was typical of many early landscapes by Jan van Scorel, such as "The Landscape with a Tournament and Hunters" or "The Adoration of the Magi". The painting, created between 1519 and 1520, most likely belongs to the early period of the artist's oeuvre.