
Oliver Peoples has long treated Los Angeles as a character, and the spring 2026 campaign, “Rendezvous Recall,” takes that logic to its natural progression by making the eyewear and the location physically indistinguishable. Photographer Dan Martensen captures model George Barnett at the Corazza House, a curvilinear 1970s Beverly Hills residence whose vertical wood slats, warm plaster, and poolside greenery supply every tonal value the frames then repeat.
Oliver Peoples Spring 2026 Campaign

The Arllett optical in olive acetate picks up the hue of the paneling behind George’s shoulder. The Laedin sunglass, a slim tortoise rectangle, matches the terra-cotta warmth of the house’s exterior at golden hour. The idea is environmental camouflage, eyewear so tuned to its surroundings that it appears native to the architecture.

The Oliver Peoples Paul Newman sunglasses, round and amber-tinted, sit on George in a profile shot where the pool, the curtain, and the frame all collapse into one warm gradient, and the line between accessory and setting dissolves entirely.

The Victory II, a gold double-bar navigator with cognac lenses, closes the sequence. Sun strikes the metal crossbar and throws a warm band across George’s forehead, fusing light source, lens tint, and skin tone into one continuous surface.

Oliver Peoples campaigns have circled this territory for years, but “Rendezvous Recall” sharpens the focus, choosing a house whose material palette so closely mirrors the spring collection that the frames appear to have absorbed the walls themselves.
Oliver Peoples’ California fixation runs even deeper in the brand’s Malibu-set Forever campaign.





