Age, Biography and Wiki
Abraham Anghik Ruben was born on 26 November, 1951 in Paulatuk, Canada. Discover Abraham Anghik Ruben's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 73 years old?
Popular As |
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Age |
73 years old |
Zodiac Sign |
Sagittarius |
Born |
26 November, 1951 |
Birthday |
26 November |
Birthplace |
Paulatuk, NWT |
Nationality |
Canada |
We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 26 November.
He is a member of famous with the age 73 years old group.
Abraham Anghik Ruben Height, Weight & Measurements
At 73 years old, Abraham Anghik Ruben height not available right now. We will update Abraham Anghik Ruben's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Not Available |
Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Abraham Anghik Ruben Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Abraham Anghik Ruben worth at the age of 73 years old? Abraham Anghik Ruben’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from Canada. We have estimated
Abraham Anghik Ruben's net worth
, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2023 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
Net Worth in 2022 |
Pending |
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Under Review |
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Abraham Anghik Ruben Social Network
Timeline
In 2018 works by Ruben and his brother Piqtoukun are featured in the "newly-renovated, reinstalled and renamed" Art Gallery of Ontario's J. S. McLean Centre for Indigenous & Canadian Art.
He was inducted into the Order of Canada, one of Canada's highest honours, on November 17, 2016. Ruben now lives and works on Saltspring Island, British Columbia.
On Saltspring Island Ruben "lives on ten acres and typically works on five to ten pieces at a time. One work in progress [in 2016] weigh[ed] four tons and is a limestone piece representing a mother bear and two cubs."
Ruben received the Order of Canada on November 17, 2016 for his artistic contributions and for his preservation of Inuvialuit culture.
In 2015–2016 "Aurora Borealis: Abraham Anghik Ruben" was shown at Prince of Wales Northern Heritage Centre, Yellowknife, NT.
From May to September 2014, the Rockwell Museum of Western Art in New York, a Smithsonian affiliate, hosted "The World of Man, Animals and Spirits: A Personal Interpretation" which includes about twenty sculptures in soapstone and bronze in which Ruben "contrasts the ancient lives of two northern peoples-Norse adventurers and Inuit (Inuvialuit) whale hunters-guiding us to a new perspective on the complex history of the North American Arctic, a history shaped by movement, contact, and change".
In 2014–2015 his solo exhibition, Abraham Anghik Ruben "Moving Forward: Breaking Through" was shown at the Museum Cerny Inuit Collection, Bern, Switzerland. on the theme of migration—specifically between the Inuit and the Vikings who "shared similar points of view".
In 2012, the exhibition of 23 "massive" sculptures, "Arctic Journeys/Ancient Memories: The Sculpture of Abraham Anghik Ruben" was organized by the Arctic Studies Center, National Museum of Natural History and the National Museum of the American Indian. It was shown at the Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian from October 2012 through January 2013 and was viewed by over 500,000 visitors. The exhibition took place concurrently with the 18th Inuit Studies Conference. His sculptures refer to Viking Norse and Inuit stories and myths. In association with the Kipling Gallery, the exhibition was then hosted by the Art Gallery of Algoma, Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario until September 2013.
In Shaman Beckoning Spirits which was included in the 2010 exhibition "Sanaugavut: Inuit Art from the Canadian Arctic" in Delhi, India, curated by the National Gallery of Canada's Christine Lalonde, Ruben represented how "Christianity changed the status of the Shaman, reducing once powerful leaders to beggars."
Ruben works with a wide variety of materials including whalebone, narwal tusk, "soapstone from British Columbia, Oregon, Brazil and South Africa; alabaster from Utah, Portugual and Italy, Italian Carrara marble" and bronze. Some of his largest pieces weigh tons. He incorporates "images and themes from diverse northern cultures, including Viking and Norse." Since 2007, Ruben has been represented by the Kipling Gallery in Woodbridge, Ontario run by two Italian Canadian owners, Rocco Pannese and Lou Ruffolo, who opened their gallery in 2004. In 2008, they hosted the 2008 exhibition "Abraham Anghik Ruben: Myths, Stories, Legends" with an illustrated catalogue, and another solo exhibition in 2009.
A half-hour documentary on Ruben was produced in 2007 as part of the 26-part series entitled "From the Spirit".
After surviving cancer in late 2004, Ruben's sculpture reflected his interest in the Inuit/Norse Viking "contact period from the early 900s to the 1400s" long before Europeans arrived in North America. In his biography, Ruben described how he was partly inspired by the story of his maternal aunt, Paniabuluk, who became the Inuit wife of Arctic explorer Vilhjalmur Stefansson and who assisted him on many of his expeditions. In the early 20th century other Nordic visitors overwintered in Ruben's ancestral lands. Since then, Ruben has researched the "cultures of the circumpolar world, including those of Siberia, Scandinavia, Greenland and Iceland" and found resonance between Inuit narratives and myths which is expressed through his art.
In 1989 Darlene Coward Wight, curator of Inuit art at the Winnipeg Art Gallery and a leading Inuit art scholar, curated "Out of Tradition" an exhibition by Abraham Anghik and his brother David Ruben Piqtoukun. She accompanied a "scaled-down version" of the exhibition across Canada's north for months.
Since 1986, Ruben has lived on Saltspring Island, British Columbia, with his wife, Patricia Donnelly. Their son Timothy was born in 1987.
He had a solo show in the Bayard Gallery, New York in 1980 and another in Vancouver in 1981, "Images for a Canadian Heritage." In the 1990s he had solo exhibitions in Santa Fe and again in New York as well as a 1994 exhibition, "Abraham Anghik: Works in Bronze" at the Isaacs/Innuit Gallery in Toronto. In the 2000s, along with a 2001–2002 solo exhibition curated by Darlene Coward Wight at the Winnipeg Art Gallery which included a catalogue, he had three solos exhibitions in Idaho, "The Art of Abraham Anghik Ruben" was featured at the Appleton Galleries in Vancouver, BC. "In 2010 "Abraham Anghik Ruben: Shaman's Dreams" was held at the Art Gallery of Mississauga with an illustrated catalogue and in 2012 he had a solo exhibition at Hazelton Fine Art Gallery, Toronto.
In the summer of 1971 Ruben began his formal studies in art under the guidance of Ronald (Ron) Senungetuk, an Iñupiaq artist and art educator, who was head of the Native Arts Centre at the University of Alaska Fairbanks. At the University's Centre he "developed the understanding of how to combine traditional material and techniques with the contemporaneous interpretations of many myths and legends." Ruben returned for a full year to study under Senungetuk from the summer of 1974 to the summer of 1975. Ruben pursued his artistic career over the next ten years.
Ruben met Toronto-based artist and art dealer and owner of the Pollock Gallery, Jack Pollock and Eva Quan in the 1970s. They introduced his work to the Toronto art scene over the next five years. Ruben's first solo exhibitions were held in The Pollock Gallery in 1977, 1978, 1979 and 1980. Pollock described Ruben as a contemporary sculptor with Inuit ancestry".
Abraham Anghik Ruben (born 1951) OC is a sculptor of Inuvialuit ancestry. Ruben was born south of the hamlet of Paulatuk in the Inuvik Region east of the Mackenzie River Delta in the Northwest Territories, Canada in 1951.
Ruben was born on November 26, 1951 at their winter camp which was located at the old Catholic coal mine, about 35 miles southeast of Paulatuk. The rich vein of coal in the Paulatuk region was used as fuel by the Inuit, then the American whalers and for the missionaries, who set up their mission in 1938. Until 1959, Ruben lived the traditional semi-nomadic Inuvialuit lifestyle with their "small band of 10-15 families" moving between seasonal fishing and hunting camps surviving on caribou, moose, muskox, game birds, waterfowl and sea mammals. In 1955, when Ruben was four-years-old, his brother, David Ruben Piqtoukun, who was one year older and their older sister Martha, were the first of the 14 siblings sent to the residential school in Aklavik. David and Martha did not see their family again until 1958. Ruben represented the traumatic 1955 experience through his mother's eyes in his 2001 sculpture entitled The Last Goodbye. In 1959, Ruben, his siblings and cousins were sent to the residential school, Grollier Hall, in Inuvik where he remained until 1970.