TREASURE HUNT
San Antonio's Pearl is hiding 50 ceramic flowers for Mother's Day

Daniela Oliver de Portillo hides a slower as part of 'Hidden Bloom II.'
Call it a scavenger hunt, an art project, or just an exercise in finding beauty in the everyday. San Antonio artist Daniela Oliver de Portillo will scatter 50 handmade ceramic flower brooches throughout the Pearl daily, May 4-10, as part of Hidden Blooms II, a celebration of connection and motherhood.
The installation is the second edition of a project that Oliver de Portillo began during the pandemic isolation. In 2025, she placed handmade ceramic vessels along the Mission Reach Trail as part of the San Antonio River Foundation's Art in the Open program. This year, she moved the treasure hunt to Pearl.
Neither the place, the objects, nor the Mother’s Day timing is coincidental. According to a release, the development was the first public space she felt comfortable bringing her newborn.
The flowers connect Oliver de Portillo’s work to her own mother, artist Carmen Oliver. The younger creator spent her childhood doing homework in Oliver’s Mexico City studio — a tradition that the daughter shares with her own family.

Those intimate, creative moments were explored in a 2023 Clamp Light Artist Studios & Gallery show, titled This Is How We Do It: Art & Family, featuring all three generations. Oliver’s acrylic painting, Floralki, nods to the shop where she sold intricate woven blooms.
"I want to do it at Pearl, and I want to do it for Mother's Day," Oliver de Portillo says in the release. "I hope that when people find these, they feel what I feel. That we're going through the same thing. That we can take a little break and just enjoy the beauty of life."
The Hidden Blooms II brooches will be hidden daily from 6 am-7 pm through Mother’s Day. Follow Oliver de Portillo or Pearl on social media for clues.
On Mother's Day itself, Oliver de Portillo will lead a paper flower bouquet workshop from 11 am-3 pm in 30-minute intervals. The first-come, first-served event is free, capped at 100 participants.
