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Chaz Barracks Fuses Art, Scholarship and Community in Summer Residency

With a GoPro strapped to his helmet and a microphone clipped to his bike, Chaz Antoine Barracks spent the summer pedaling through Homer, New York, transforming everyday encounters into both scholarship and art. The filmmaker, media scholar and postdoctoral fellow in the College of Visual and Performing Arts used his residency at the to launch “Mic on a Bike,” an experimental storytelling project capturing the rhythms, voices and histories of small-town life.

An art installation, pictures hanging in front of an arched window
Chaz Barracks’ installation at the Phillips Free Library in Homer

His concept was simple but intentional: ride a bike through town, record conversations and everyday reflections, and capture what Barracks calls the 鈥渟peculative spectacular鈥 of everyday life, building on his and his scholarly lens.

Barracks is no stranger to turning the ordinary into something extraordinary. His award winning 2020 short film “,” a visual meditation on Black life and joy in Richmond, Virginia, blended oral histories, dance and self-representation to create a moving portrait of community. His work was born during the isolation of the pandemic and exemplified his commitment to unique storytelling.

With a Ph.D. in media, art and text from Virginia Commonwealth University, Barracks has developed a scholarly body of work at the intersection of Black queer studies, performance and digital storytelling. His projects blend podcast interviews, photography, film and public installations to explore identity, memory and community.

a microphone mounted on a bicycle
Barracks’ mic on a bike

As a postdoctoral fellow at Syracuse, he continued to merge his art and his research. 鈥淚 see media-making as inquiry and intervention,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 artistic and intellectual practice rooted in lived experience.鈥

Barracks says he is drawn to places that allow him to slow down and connect. Homer, at the gateway to the Finger Lakes, offered the perfect pace with its vibrant downtown business district, quaint Village Green and large, well-preserved federal historic district, surrounded by farmland, lakes and rolling hills. And the Center for the Arts was the perfect collaborator. Housed in a restored 1892 Romanesque church, the nonprofit visual and performing arts hub presents more than 150 events annually, attracting 25,000 people. 鈥淚t鈥檚 focused on community building, and I appreciate that kind of grassroots arts activism,鈥 Barracks says.

Linda Dickerson-Hartsock, strategic initiatives advisor at 网爆门 Libraries and a founder of the center, helped shape his residency after discussing his scholarship at Bird Library鈥檚 Mower Faculty Commons. Barracks’ vision resonated with her as both former founding executive director of the Blackstone LaunchPad and the Connective Corridor. 鈥淗e brings artistry and scholarly depth that shifts how we think about place, storytelling and the role of art in connecting community,鈥 she says.

Man is pictured in an auditorium
Barracks at the Center for the Arts in Homer, New York

The residency followed principles of creative placemaking, using arts and culture to connect residents, foster belonging and spark dialogue around identity, history and shared values. Barracks鈥 work drew on the 鈥渟low movement鈥 coupled with bike culture, both of which engage people with their surroundings at a human scale.

鈥淏iking is joy for me,鈥 Barracks says. 鈥淚t is how I decompress, think and connect with nature. In Homer, it became a way to share knowledge, culture and history with the community.鈥 Once a stop on the Underground Railroad, the town offers deep resonance for conversations about Black freedom, movement and mobility.

Barracks鈥 residency also included DJ sets at the Homer Farmers’ Market and other community art spaces and studios, where he mixed poetry and narrative exploring Black joy through sound. It culminated in a multimedia exhibition at the Phillips Free Library, featuring “Everyday Black Matter” alongside reflections of “Mic on a Bike” audio and visual material from his Homer residency. He incorporated curated books on Black and queer history and staged the library鈥檚 first-ever 鈥渁fter dark鈥 event, transforming it into an experimental art gallery with music and ethereal stage lighting for a one-night pop-up.

Barracks鈥 approach is informed by Imagining America, a national consortium promoting democratic civic engagement through the arts and humanities that was housed at the University from 2007 to 2017. A longtime participant and recipient of its Stories of Change public scholarship award, he will share his work at its 2025 annual gathering this fall in New Mexico.

Barracks is now editing “Mic on a Bike” with a team of SU student filmmakers, building a growing digital archive that began with “Everyday Black Matter.” He sees media as both artifact and act, capturing presence, asserting worth and reflecting cultural memory. He envisions taking “Mic on a Bike” to other towns across the country and around the world.

鈥淏iking itself is a mobile meditation,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t reinforces my belief in the image as profound proof of life. This is not just about recording others. It is about showing up fully as myself: Black, queer, neurodivergent, joyful, imperfect.鈥