
Rabanne introduces The Pulse, a new campaign chapter that moves from Rio to Andalucía and shifts the energy from release to tension. Following Sunset to Sunrise, the house turns toward Southern Spain for a story shaped by rhythm, ritual, flamenco, and collective intensity. The campaign also marks 60 years of Rabanne, bringing the focus back to Spain, the founder’s roots, and Paco Rabanne’s lasting fascination with the body in motion.
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The Pulse begins with a change in pace. Rio carried the force of release, while Andalucía brings a slower and more charged rhythm. The campaign draws from the region’s spring atmosphere, where Semana Santa and the Feria create a season of anticipation. Nights stretch, people gather, and movement carries a heightened sense of presence. Rabanne uses this setting to explore how beauty, fashion, and culture can share one physical language.
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Flamenco drives the campaign’s central rhythm. The art form appears as something rooted and alive, carried by a new generation that honors its past while shaping its present. Rabanne connects this tension to its own visual language, where structure, shine, and skin create a direct relationship with movement. Paco Rabanne built his vision around the body’s ability to catch light, create sensation, and hold attention through motion.
Rabanne looks at preparation as part of the performance, where beauty already carries movement. This opening moment gives the story its first rhythm, tracing the quiet gestures that happen before release. As the energy builds, flamenco tightens. The movement stays precise, grounded, and physical before it opens into a larger shared force.


Carmen Avilés stands at the center of The Pulse, bringing clarity and depth to the campaign. She appears alongside the Farruquito lineage, which carries a direct sense of continuity within flamenco. Around them, a new generation of Andalusian artists pushes the form from within, giving the campaign a living cultural frame. Mitch, recently nominated for Best New Actor at the Goya Awards, adds another charge to the story through a raw and open presence.
Created with Yerai Cortés, the music shapes the campaign’s arc as it builds, stretches, and releases with the movement onscreen. The rhythm does not move in a clean line. It shifts and deepens, allowing tension to grow before it breaks. Rabanne uses this musical structure to connect the intimate gestures of preparation with the larger energy of performance.

The campaign reaches El Rocío, where the intimate becomes collective. Bodies gather, rhythm spreads, and the story enters a near-devotional space. The Pulse finds its strongest force in this moment, when shared intensity replaces any need for instruction. Rabanne places fashion and beauty inside that current. The campaign treats both as one expression of the body, shaped through movement, light, sensation, and cultural memory.

















