Not only was Charles White a prolific artist, he was also a prolific exhibitor. The Art of Charles White was an exhibition that took place at The Charles W. Bowers Memorial Museum [2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana, California. A Department of the City of Santa Ana]. The exhibition ran from March 1 - 30, 1969. This was a slightly novel invitation card, in that both folded sections had curved sides, referencing the oval nature of the image on the front of the card. It's uncredited, but is J'Accuse! No. 6, Charcoal, 1966 Collection of Heritage Gallery, (as documented in the monograph, Images of Dignity page 112). Another work from White's J'Accuse! series was reproduced on the inside of the invitation and was credited as "J'Accuse! #9" with no further details.

The text inside the card was as follows:

"Charles White loves this world; he loves living in it. The successes he has accumulated as a creative artist, however, have come only after more hardships than many face in a full lifetime. Having personally experienced the way of Negroes in American life, he naturally has chosen to produced this vital human drama in artistic form. His art forges the rejected fragments of social dignity, plus love, hope, and suffering into the very symbols we recognize as human patience, resistance, sacrifice, resignation, and triumph. His human spirit, his personal drive, and his early and consuming interest in fine arts has been more than a match for the hurdles of our current society. He has risen to stand among the forefront of contemporary American artists."