Stir 2001: A Space Odyssey by Stanley Kubrick with the cubist Pablo Picasso and throw it all fed to a pair of neural networks: what comes out?

A psychedelic parallel world that seems the product of an AI reflections to which free access to a lot of painting was given.
Bhautik Joshi, self-proclaimed "professional idiot," lives in Iceland and is the author of "2001: A Picasso Odyssey" -a colorful and cacophonous reworking of Kubrick's masterpiece.
This week, he published the video on Vimeo experiment, announcing via Twitter.
The video follows the astronaut David Bowman through the different compartments of his spaceship while around him shake a kaleidoscopic world.
We then see Bowman who travels through space to reach Jupiter and the video ends with the final scene of the movie, where the hero finds himself in a strange room with a mysterious door.
2001: A Space Odyssey, Kubrick is not the kind of film that offers its viewers a simple explanation: does not have a canonical narrative or dramatic highlights real.
Kubrick chose a minimalist approach to this film, carefully composing each scene so that the viewer could co-create the meaning, using their imagination.
In an entirely different age and relying on half equally distant, Picasso (and with him, George Braque) led the Cubism, an art movement that has in turn tried to scramble reality, adding layers and layers of colors and geometric shapes in the world.
Blending artistic distant reality Picasso and Kubrick, Joshi may have wanted to recreate the feeling you get when you venture for the first time into unknown territories.

From Vice