His physical disabilities do not affect Ming-chung Huang's creativity. He has developed his mind through a careful study of philosophy and literature. He has plumbed the depths of human nature and set down on paper his experiences. In recent years, Huang's subjects have been human heads and faces. He wants to show that no one should be marginalized, and that no one should be ashamed of him or herself. His most well-known work, "Helplessness and Expectations," is a Chimera that is unable to fly. It looks up at the sky in both helplessness and expectation. The feelings it expresses and evokes represent perhaps best, out of all his carvings, Huang's own mind and tell from whence his creativity springs.