Opening Reception: Casey Joiner's "Housekeeping"

Institute 193

215 North Limestone, Lexington, Kentucky 40507

Thursday, October 30th
6:00pm - 8:00pm EDT
Friday, October 31st
11:00am - 6:00pm EDT
Saturday, November 1st
11:00am - 6:00pm EDT
Wednesday, November 5th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Thursday, November 6th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Friday, November 7th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Saturday, November 8th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Wednesday, November 12th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Thursday, November 13th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Friday, November 14th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Saturday, November 15th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Wednesday, November 19th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Thursday, November 20th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Friday, November 21st
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Saturday, November 22nd
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Wednesday, November 26th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Wednesday, December 3rd
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Thursday, December 4th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Friday, December 5th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Saturday, December 6th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Wednesday, December 10th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Thursday, December 11th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Friday, December 12th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Saturday, December 13th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Wednesday, December 17th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Thursday, December 18th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Friday, December 19th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST
Saturday, December 20th
11:00am - 6:00pm EST

Institute 193 is pleased to present Housekeeping, the latest exhibition of New Orleans-based photographer Casey Joiner’s record of the strange and nonlinear landscape of loss. Created over the past several years while navigating the long illness and eventual passing of her father in early 2023, these images move between still lifes, interiors, and portraits — both real and imagined — reflecting the distortions of grief and the fragile persistence of memory.

Intimate, often domestic, and sometimes surreal, this work contemplates the regression to childhood that comes with the death of a parent and the shifting line between memory and imagination. It also explores the concept of “home” as both a physical and generational space, familial bonds, personal identity, and what lingers after loss. The title Housekeeping comes from the idea of care and maintenance — of a home, of a family, of memory itself. It also nods to Marilynne Robinson’s novel of the same name, which meditates on longing, absence, and the fragile beauty of human bonds.

While Joiner began by photographing the intimate spaces and objects that defined her childhood, this documentation evolved into a broader record of absence and return. Slipping between the documentary and the dreamlike, the images presented here are fragments of a life, stitched together like memory itself — truthful, but not always factual. Losing a parent is a universal but deeply private experience. Housekeeping offers an intimate window into that experience, while also touching on the broader questions of time, memory, and what we carry forward.



Housekeeping will also appear as a monograph from Fall Line Press, forthcoming December 2025.