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Leonardo AI Imagination Fund Backs Paris Creator's VR Dream Project

James Ding   Mar 12, 2026 05:58 0 Min Read


A Paris-based digital artist is turning viral TikTok content into immersive cinema, backed by Leonardo AI's Imagination Fund. Lucas Clément, creator of the surreal 'AnotherWorld' series, has completed a five-minute short film paired with a 360° VR experience—marking one of the more ambitious projects to emerge from the AI art platform's funding initiative.

The project represents a calculated bet by Leonardo AI on creator-driven content that showcases its generative tools in action. For Clément, it's an escape from the algorithmic treadmill of short-form video.

"I wanted to move away from short-format videos to expand the types of stories I could tell," Clément said.

From Algorithm Fodder to Cinematic Ambition

AnotherWorld started like countless other AI art accounts—experimental posts on TikTok testing what resonated. But Clément carved a niche in liminal spaces, those uncanny environments that trigger déjà vu. His comment sections filled with variations of the same response: viewers swearing they'd seen these places in their own dreams.

That emotional hook caught Leonardo AI's attention. The Imagination Fund, which supports creators building with the platform's tools, greenlit Clément's proposal to transform his bite-sized dreamscapes into something viewers could actually inhabit.

Production Reality

Working largely solo, Clément used Leonardo AI throughout production to generate and iterate on environmental assets. The workflow let him maintain visual consistency across a longer format—something notoriously difficult when AI-generated imagery tends toward stylistic drift.

"Leonardo helped me keep my overall vision intact from the beginning," he noted. The platform ran constantly during production, serving as what Clément calls a "visual skeleton" for the project.

His core challenge? Threading the needle between surreal and believable. Too abstract and viewers disengage; too realistic and the dream logic falls apart. That tension—familiar to anyone who's tried to describe a dream the morning after—drives the aesthetic.

What It Means for AI-Native Content

The finished piece, titled "Between Worlds," demonstrates what's possible when AI tools serve a coherent artistic vision rather than generating novelty for its own sake. Clément is direct about his position: AI is his medium, not his message.

"This project completely took me out of my comfort zone," he said. The subtext is clear—he's betting his creative future on proving AI-assisted work can carry the same emotional weight as traditional filmmaking.

For Leonardo AI, backing projects like this serves dual purposes. It generates showcase content while stress-testing tools on ambitious productions. The VR component particularly pushes boundaries, requiring environmental consistency that single-image generation doesn't demand.

Whether AnotherWorld translates from phone screens to headsets remains to be seen. But Clément has at least escaped the 60-second loop—for now.


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