One who had a unique gift at conveying musical ideas was the Spanish artist José Segrelles (1885-1969), whose enigmatic and evocative watercolors were published on both sides of the Atlantic. In 1927, the Illustrated London News published his visualizations of Beethoven’s Fifth Symphony.
The Roman numerals of a clockface, shimmer in the air behind the hooded figure of Destiny, whose right hand reaches for the iron loop in the shadows at the upper right.
Later in the first movement of Beethoven’s Fifth, Segrelles imagines a satyr clawing the air beside a glowing light in the shape of a butterfly. On the ground before him, weird organic forms grow upward toward a lone red flower.
Segrelles commented on the theme of this picture: “And so Destiny raises mortal men and women by its secret power, which urges us on, advancing without backward movement, despite our pleas, to the end of our days.”

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Gallery of Segrelles samples by Jim Vadeboncoeur
Segrelles Museum official site.
Thanks, Barry!