AP Art History › Understanding terminology that describes seventeenth- and eighteenth-century sculpture
Equestrian statues were favored by absolute monarchs in the seventeenth century because __________.
they conveyed a sense of grandeur and power about the monarch being depicted
they showed that the subject was an expert rider of horses
they showed the subject interacting with a lowly animal
they depicted the subject as an everyday person
Equestrian statues, even when life-size, created a portrait of their subjects on massive scales. While commonplace in Rome, they were hardly made after the fall of Rome until the Renaissance, and in the age of absolutism in the seventeenth century, they were made all across Europe to commemorate and celebrate monarchs. These statues made the monarchs depicted in them appear intimidating, grandiose, and worthy of their position as absolute monarchs.