The photo series by Jean-Pierre Maurer and Robert Müller was  only shown once, in the Kunstgewerbemuseum Zürich in 1968,  without any commentary other than a text by 
Ettore Sottsass. It  is now displayed in this same way in 
Morgan Is Sad Today,  which has been republished. The title of the book comes from a song  whose lyrics go on to say “…sadder than yesterday”– and  which in turn comes from the movie 
Morgan, A Suitable Case  for Treatment, 1966, by Karel Reisz. It marked the  beginning of a new way of making movies, the Free Cinema, with  statements like “No film can be too personal,” or  “Perfection is not an aim,” which are also reflected in the  photographs at hand. The staged documentations and the  stagings documented in the studio recall elaborate, but  unpretentious concepts in art photography series by  Swiss artists such as Manon or Urs Lüthi; on the other  hand, though, the formal style, motifs, and narrative  threads echo comic books. The pictures capture the Zeitgeist: on  a trip to the myth-obsessed London of the Sixties or when Zurich  Beat bands still posed for record covers standing head to head,  or made leaps wearing suits with skinny ties and Flamenco dancer  ankle boots. The Mid-sixties were also a time when the  first large-scale black and white prints of posters  became available: of Buster Keaton or Albert Einstein  sticking his tongue out, or Trotsky.The photo series 
Morgan  Is Sad Today is in this sense very much also a  conceptual stringing together of posters. In his text  Ettore Sottsass stays very close to what the Zeitgeist embodied  without glorification or denigration, with a subtle sense of  amusement. And Sandro Fischli draws on the backgrounds of the  pictures, sometimes sharply, sometimes deliberately, fraying a  subjective and associative social and cultural history of the  1960s, and looking back on an economically booming Switzerland  in which the boundaries of high culture were becoming  increasingly porous.