The Invisible World reveals a dogged artist as he battles depression, contemporary tastes, and the constant risk of failure while searching the spiritual realm for undiscovered images. Working in near anonymity in Nyack, New York, painter Mark Weiss pursues an aesthetic discipline many would consider an alternative path to modern art trends. He has developed a new method of automatic painting that resists formulaic closure and rewards persistence, revealing as it creates – and perhaps hurting and healing the artist in the process. Rooted in surrealist and abstract expressionist techniques and immersed in Jungian psychology, Mark’s art invites the viewer to follow him into what he calls “the invisible world,” a creative space that merges the forms within the artist’s psyche and the formlessness of spiritual realms.