Frank Benson was a key figure in the vital artistic arena of early 20th-century Boston, a member of a school of painters named for their city. He painted an idealized world that was never ugly or harsh, focusing instead on the lifestyle of genteel New Englanders. His outdoor images, especially those of vibrant young women, were painted in the full spectrum of colors, in bright sunshine. The model in Sunlight is the artist's daughter Eleanor, who, like her mother and sisters, often posed for Benson's outdoor works. Enveloped in sunshine, Eleanor's white dress is crisscrossed with the blue shadows typical of orthodox Impressionism. Even her gesture-left hand raised against the glare-refers to the light that is the painting's true subject.
Benson studied at the Boston Museum School and the Académie Julian, eventually embracing many of the techniques and goals of French Impressionism. Benson was accomplished in a variety of media, including watercolor, pastel, aquatint, and engraving. In the 1890s, the artist accepted a commission to work on the decoration of the Library of Congress and completed murals of the four seasons and Three Graces for the project.
[Benson] sets before us visions of the free life of the open air . . . in a landscape drenched in sweet sunlight.
-Critic William Howe Downes, 1911