https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/435641
From the link: The child holds a quince as a symbol of Redemption and the landscape too seems to allude to the theme of death and Resurrection: the trees are barren in the foreground and the fields fallow, while in the background all is green (the effect is somewhat exaggerated as some of the brownish color in the middle ground is due to the copper resonate green having altered with time). The path leading from the town to the barren foreground is a motif found in many of Bellini’s paintings and may be intended to suggest the journey of the life of the soul (on this theme see Augusto Gentili, "Bellini and Landscape," in Peter Humfrey, ed.,
The Cambridge Companion to Giovanni Bellini, Cambridge, 2004, pp. 167–81).