The picture with St. Catherine is not much different from the previous one. She is presented like her mother, with a pilgrim cane and a crucifix. Likewise, like St. Bridget she lifts her eyes to heaven. But Catherine sees only the great light coming from the open sky. The picture's caption says: COMES PEREGRINATIONIS FIlIA E[I]VS S [ANCTA] CATHARINA (Travel companion, her daughter St. Catherine).
In these both paintings, the mother and daughter are shown as nuns, pilgrims with a single vocation - a journey to God. Both are looking in the same direction, but their visions are different. Bridget sees Jesus as the one who had a grace to talk to the Divine Persons and Saints. Catherine, like other Bridgettines, is following the example of her mother. This thought could be visualized in a plastic way that each of them was depicted in a separate image, and the seemingly almost mechanical repetition of the composition is used to convey the idea of imitation.
These two painting show that Bridget and then also her followers - the friars of the Order of the Most Holy Saviour, undertake an ascetic pilgrimage through the life in a convent. In life of Bridget and Catherine it was the time when they went to Rome. There led life modeled on monastic. These paintings undoubtedly refer also to their numerous pilgrimages, which they considered to be an important factor in spiritual development. In the distance, in the landscape in the image with St. Catherine we can see the outline of the building, which shape resembles the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. Indeed, at the end of St. Bridget's life, Catherine and her mother went on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem.