The present work aimed at resolving the mystery accompanying the famous Ko-Kutani Honzenji temple shallow bowl by investigating the main elements associated with the coating composition in the surface decoration. This unique vessel belongs to Honzenji temple, located in the Maeda Domain (today’s Ishikawa Prefecture) and is on display at the Ishikawa Prefecture Kutaniyaki Art Museum in Kaga. The Honzenji temple bowl bears a cryptic figure painted in red enamel on the underside and story has it that the Maeda Lord himself may have painted it in the mid-17th century, thus making the bowl a very relevant piece of the history of the Maeda clan, Ishikawa Prefecture (Maeda fiefdom in the Edo period), and Japanese porcelain as a whole. Yet the identification of the actual firing date of the bowl has proven a daunting task for curators worldwide. On the basis of the previously published studies on the world’s most extensive collection of Ko-Kutani Masterpieces belonging to the Ishikawa Prefectural Museum of Art, and shards excavated at Kaga kiln sites, including the celebrated Hakuji bowl (Ishikawa Archaeological Foundation), both conducted by Energy-Dispersive X-Ray Fluorescence spectroscopy (pED-XRF), and in consideration of the absolute prohibition to sample or even touch the Honzenji bowl, pED-XRF was once again selected as the most suitable technique for the analysis of all the enamels and glazing materials. Analytical evidence, for the first time ever, has proven crucial to resolving the issue by enabling the precise dating of the bowl and unveiling the true story behind its technical features and the cryptic underside decoration.
Montanari et al. (Sat,) studied this question.