Commissioning Searle to cover the Eichmann trial may well have occurred to Life's editor after an earlier assignment the artist had completed for the magazine. In 1957 Searle had been dispatched by Life to cover the trial of the notorious John Bodkin Adams case. He was a doctor accused of over prescribing narcotics to an elderly patient in whose will he was named as a beneficiary. This masterful drawing appeared as a double-page spread in the 22 April, 1957 issue of Life magazine along with the following portraits of the defense and prosecution lawyers and key witnesses.
The courtroom drawing above is, I would say, comparable to Searle's tour de force depiction of Winston Churchill's last speech in the House of Commons, again for Life magazine (4th April, 1955).
'The accused'
The incredible thing about these drawings is they were all done from memory. Sketching was not permitted in
British courts. He got around this by surreptitiously drawing on tiny
note paper in his lap & taking multiple toilet breaks where he would rapidly draw from his notes and what he could memorise! With only a week's deadline to collate the necessary research
the Old Bailey assignment turned out to be much effort for little
remuneration, 'at least the Eichmann trial went on for months!' Searle
joked.
Courtesy of the Chris Beetles Gallery here are some of those notes and sketches made in the court room.Perhaps inspired by Life magazine a French publication 'Marseille magazine' commissioned Searle to illustrate a similarly sensational trial that gripped France in 1963, that of the 'gang de pétanques' in Marseille.
To see more of the 'Marseilles' court drawings (plus the Churchill speech picture) check out this post
Sketch of the 'Fuchs trial' 1950 presided over by Lord Goddard.
Lord Goddard 1956
Illustration of a British Judge for a 1962 print advertisement for Beetle Dough Molding Compound
From 'Merry England'