Main issue here is that you have a prominent nasal spine (ANS) which is the thing that contributes to the appearance of your lower jaw looking relatively recessed compared to your upper jaw. So, ANS would need to be cutdown/reduced. That would resolve to what's called a DEPROJECTION RHINOPLASTY. So, if you got that, your lower jaw area would look MORE in balance with the upper jaw.
With the PROMINENT ANS as it is now, you would look TERRIBLE if the upper jaw was advanced BUT the ANS was not reduced in the process. So IF you got a double jaw surgery and ALSO IF the upper jaw needed to be advanced to 'mesh' with a lower jaw advancement, you would need to have a surgeon who could DEPROJECT the ANS as part of the process.
Most jaw surgeries for people who have had prior ortho (or even those who have not), the bite needs to be DECOMPENSATED. But INSTEAD of using that term, let's keep it SIMPLE and just say it's more likely than not that the teeth will need to be put in BRACES to prepare for the displacements of the surgery.
Aesthetically speaking, you look like a candidate for SINGLE lower jaw surgery and deprojection rhinoplasty. It's also looking like if you found a good rhino surgeon to perform the deprojection rhino and did that first, your lower jaw would look LESS recessive than it does now when compared to the prominent ANS that makes your upper jaw look too PROTRUSIVE, in which case, you could re-evaluate the jaw balance and perhaps decide not to get a single lower jaw advancement at all.
In closing your PROMINENT ANS is what's throwing off aesthetic jaw to jaw balance and contributing to the LOOK/appearance of your maxila area looking TOO protrusive which in turn makes your lower jaw look retrusive via RELATIVE COMPARISON.