Frank Ocean’s silences always say more than any grand campaign. And when he speaks, he does so in his own language: art, vision, mystery. This time, he returns not with an album, but with the comeback of HOMER, his luxury label founded in 2021. But what makes this relaunch more than just a drop is the figure he’s chosen to signal this new chapter: Rosalía.
Yes, the Motomami. The most influential Spanish artist of the 21st century. The one who shifts seamlessly between flamenco and dembow, urban culture and the Met Gala stage. Now, she’s also the new face of HOMER. And that changes everything.
The first image from the new collection —already a visual cult item on social media and moodboards— is a silent shot. A lo-fi, raw photograph that feels almost intimate. Rosalía sits with her guitar, as if about to record another viral demo from her studio. Around her neck hangs the piece that defines HOMER’s aesthetic: “2 Livers with Bullet Holes”, a necklace that feels like a dream from a dystopian lab—precise, poetic, and dark. It’s fine jewelry, yes, but it’s also a statement: luxury isn’t what it used to be, and Ocean knows it.
Frank Ocean isn’t just making fashion. He’s building a language. And for this new narrative, he needed a collaborator who could speak his emotional and aesthetic dialect. Rosalía does —with her gaze, her fingers, her guitar. Her selection is more than strategic; it’s symbolic. She represents everything HOMER wants to be in 2025: bold, experimental, honest, and emotionally maximalist.


The campaign’s visual aesthetic rejects the traditional tropes of luxury. No golden backdrops, no dramatic lighting, no forced poses. Just a captured moment where art, jewelry, and music collide. HOMER doesn’t shout at you to buy; it whispers a secret. And this time, that secret has Rosalía’s fierce, focused face.
The full collection is now available at select physical locations —New York, London, and Los Angeles— where HOMER feels more like a conceptual gallery than a boutique. For the rest of the world, the brand’s official website (homer.com) offers a deeper look at each piece, with technical descriptions that read like industrial poetry. Nothing here is accidental.
But the real story isn’t just in the jewelry—it’s in the narrative design. HOMER doesn’t sell accessories; it offers symbols. And the necklace Rosalía wears in this campaign speaks of vulnerability, resistance, and beauty that hurts. Like her music. Like Ocean’s lyrics.
This drop is a reclamation of fashion as a medium for discourse. HOMER isn’t here to decorate—it’s here to provoke. What does luxury mean today? What is beautiful, what is tough, what is worthy of being treasured? In this terrain, Rosalía shines as a figure who embodies it all: tradition and future, rawness and elegance, strength and sensitivity.
The return of HOMER isn’t a campaign. It’s a statement. And by placing Rosalía at its center, Ocean has signed off on one of the coolest, most culturally resonant collaborations of the year. This isn’t branding —it’s alchemy. A meeting of two artists who understand that real luxury is creating something that defies explanation.
In a world flooded with polished images, HOMER offers intentional imperfection. In an industry addicted to speed, Ocean responds with stillness. And in a market full of the same faces, Rosalía arrives—different, free, brutal.
This is how new luxury is written: with power, with vision, with soul.

