"... if the quark has been experimentally proved to exist?"
This really depends on what any individual means by
"experimentally proved to exist?".
Before quarks, it usually meant observing an interaction of the particle.
For instance, the neutrino was inferred in beta decay, but the community did not consider it "experimentally proved to exist" until Cowan and Reines observed an inverse beta decay caused by neutrinos. I personally am satisfied with the experimental evidence for the existence of quarks, but "evidence" is not "proof".
It is a clever theory that includes the prediction that the core particles can never be liberated. One thing that can be said in favor of evidence for quarks is that numerous experiments trying to disprove their existence have failed.
The best evidence for quarks include, using quarks to:
--correlate baryon and meson masses and magnetic moments.
--understand point-like structures seen inside the proton in deep inelastic scattering of electrons by protons. As I said, the best argument for quarks is a lack of evidence against their existence, despite numerous eforts.