As Paris marked the 200th anniversary of photography, Nashville-based photographer Joseph Ross made his international gallery debut at Galerie Joseph, presenting an image that reflects his ongoing dedication to redefining how Blackness is seen, experienced, and celebrated through contemporary photography.
The exhibition served as a milestone in Ross’s career and further established his presence within the fine art photography world. Rooted in family ties to Memphis and New Orleans and shaped by Nashville’s evolving creative landscape, Ross has emerged as a distinctive voice in American visual culture. Since beginning his professional career in 2018, he has documented Nashville’s rise as a cultural capital while expanding his work to New York, Los Angeles, and beyond.
Ross has photographed a wide range of influential artists, including Tinashe, Bootsy Collins, Yola, Billy Strings, Maren Morris, Julien Baker, Marcus King, and Gottmik. His photography has appeared in Allure, The Wall Street Journal, and Rolling Stone, and he has created campaigns for global brands such as Apple and Puma. Whether photographing entertainment icons or crafting imagery for music and film, Ross’s work centers on connection, humanity, and the intimate creative worlds that exist both onstage and behind the scenes.
The image exhibited in Paris continued Ross’s exploration of softness, identity, and the enduring beauty of Blackness — themes central to his practice and deeply informed by his relationship to Southern Black culture, history, and art. His visual storytelling has been recognized by the American Photography Awards (2023, 2024) and the Paris Black and White Photo Contest, achievements that have helped solidify his standing in the fine art and gallery photography world.
At the core of this announcement is a broader story: art from Nashville is emerging on a global scale, propelled by a creative community that is more ambitious, dynamic, and boundary-pushing than ever before. Ross’s appearance in the Galerie Joseph exhibition underscored the expanding global influence of Nashville’s artists and their contribution to contemporary cultural conversations.
“Showing work in Paris during such an historic moment in photography was both humbling and energizing, ” Ross said. “It felt like a celebration not only of my own journey, but of the stories and creative power coming out of Nashville.”
Ross’s debut in Paris highlighted both the evolution of his artistic practice and the growing reach of Nashville’s arts community — a meaningful contribution to the international reflection on photography’s 200-year legacy.
