Located on the north wall of the Church, the “Nursing Madonna” belongs to a pictorial phase of the late Gothic style, between the end of the 14th and the beginning of the 15th century.
The Virgin is depicted as a whole figure in the maternal gesture of breastfeeding the Child, symbolic expression of the sacred humanity of Mary, woman and mother of Jesus.
Outlined by a double red and yellow frame, the image stands out from a deep blue background covered, in the upper part, by a white curtain dotted with small red crosses, as a starry sky, whereas, in the lower part we can glimpse the structure of a seat on which the Madonna is seated, placed in three quarters.
The Virgin wears a red robe embellished with small pearls in the cuffs and a mantle covering her from head to foot. This mantle is entirely blue outside, whereas inside the lower part is ocher and the stretch, that wraps her head reclined towards Jesus, is red. Madonna's face, depicted in three quarters, turns a tender gaze towards who looks at her. From her robe appears part of her breast, to which the right hand of the Holy Child is humanly clung, with his head leaning forward to suckle, meanwhile with his left hand he grabs his Mother’s red robe. Jesus wears a green tunic adorned with little pearls.