Gillies made a rare foray south of the border in 1958 to the Cumbrian village of Cartmel. The Priory has a long colourful history surviving Scottish raids in the 14th Century, and Henry VIII and Cromwell in those succeeding. The Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art has a pencil drawing inherited from the Lillie Collection of the same subject, but from a different angle and there are at least two paintings including this splendid example. Gillies has placed himself, respectfully, outside the grounds, looking in over a low stone wall running the full length of his composition. The buildings and bare winter trees are brightly lit by a winter sun, under a dark sky.