Good morning Gentlemen,
With reference to Glen's post.
The image of Hotei and his sack has long been used to portray a lack of concern for social conventions or material wealth.
He is said to have carried his meagre possessions around in a large sack.
As such, he became a popular subject for Zen ink painters, who saw him as the personification of non - attachment.
The item on the reverse which looks like a radish represents a priest's horsehair sceptre, known as a Hossu, which Hotei has gleefully discarded along with the other attributes of Buddhist dogma.