In contrast, Julia Quenzler and Elizabeth Cook’s drawings, also pastel, are more static. “Julia chooses to focus on one or two of the key characters while the background fades out,” says Katie, “like she’s focusing on the key detail of a memory.” John Hewitt, an illustrator and senior lecturer in illustration with animation at Manchester School of Art, who did a PhD in the subject of courtroom sketches, says Julia and Elizabeth’s styles are equally fitting of the in-court atmosphere. “Courts are very still places,” he describes, “it’s better for memory, lawyers can recite their lines.” By contrast, Siân Frances’ drawings are more conventionally illustrative, as she uses pencil lines and washes of watercolour – “also a skill to do so quickly,” says Katie. “She renders the whole courtroom to the edges of the page, showing urgency and speed.” Siân learned the trade from her father, also a courtroom artist, while Julia apparently trained by drawing portraits in nightclubs. All four artists are self-taught.
Prior to his career as an illustrator and lecturer, John worked as a clerk for solicitors, so for his PhD subject he chose to focus on one of the few places the worlds of law and art intersect. He researched particular cases, one being the Soham murder trials in which Ian Huntley and Maxine Carr were tried and eventually convicted. John chose this because it was so heavily reported in the media. “45 drawings were published over 16 days. It was intense, I’ve never seen courtroom illustration used in such a way, before or since.” From John’s perspective, while the press generally demonised Carr and called her “the new Myra [Hindley]”, the courtroom artists portrayed a more measured view. “[The artists] said there are limitations to self-expression in what they do, and that it was important not to sensationalise, and to be truthful.”
Making an image in British courts was banned following the 1922 trial of Edith Thompson and Frederick Bywaters, a British couple eventually convicted of murdering Thompson’s husband Percy. The couple was young and glamorous, and therefore attracted a fashionable crowd to the court. The press began to report the trial as if it were an event of high society, with photos of the attendees, and eventually, the judge complained that the media circus was interfering with the fairness of the trial. As a result, in 1925 it was made illegal to make any image in court in the UK. Similarly in the US, the trial of OJ Simpson and its ensuing media frenzy led to cameras being banned from many courts, and a resurgence of illustration. This is exactly the cause for concern around cameras being allowed into the British courts.
“A charismatic criminal is a gift to the media,” John says. “Cameras are another layer of vanity potential. Plus if we lose courtroom drawing, we lose the last grip of the regularity of an artist being part of news reporting. The memory of the trial is considered to be owned by the artist, and it validates the use of memory as an evidential tool. The illustration is a narrative, a visual story, all the moments are conflated, unlike a photo which just shows one moment.”
Barrister Anna McKenna QC says that letting cameras into the Old Bailey is just one step in an ongoing project to make the legal process more transparent to the public, which will likely lead to more courts allowing filming. “It’s a helpful way of the public seeing the system, and you’ve got to start somewhere,” she says. “It’s counterintuitive to start with a boring case at Bromley County Court, for instance. If you show high profile cases at the Old Bailey, people will be interested and it will attract attention. To me, public enquiries seem the obvious place to start having cameras, because they are of broad public interest.”
One of the concerns of the legal profession, Anna says, is that cameras are used responsibly, otherwise it could reduce the seriousness of the legal process or even affect security. She explains that one of the reasons barristers and judges wear wigs and gowns is to create “the solemnity of the court”, but it’s also for anonymity, “so if someone doesn’t like their sentence, they can’t chase the judge or barrister down the street.”