Ana was born in Uruguay to a family of immigrants who arrived in South America just before World War II from Poland. Her parents made their living out of a delicatessen shop, but art was natural in their household. Her father used to paint as a hobby, and his big dream was that one of his offspring would carry on the famous family name Huberman. Bronislav Huberman, her father's uncle, was a renown violinist, and the founder of the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra in Tel Aviv.
Ana attended an American private school and from a very early age showed artistic tendencies, being specially gifted with her hands. At the age of 10 she used to make dough out of the white of the bread, make little roses with it, dry them, paint them and make little bunches with a pin behind, which she would sell to her friend's mothers as beautiful lapel pins. As a teenager she was sent to the USA on an exchange student program for one year, which she spent with a family in Michigan, where again, art was a part of everyday life. The mother painted, and the father, a Ford engineer, played the violin on his spare time and built his own violins by himself.
So, for the last six years she is fully dedicated to art. At first it was naturally all ceramics sculpture. Then she started exhibiting and getting very favorable responses from the public, who relished her work, bought, and encouraged her to go on to other media so it was only natural to take it one step further, to bronze. Since then she has participated in several exhibits, solo and group in Israel and abroad, and for the last four years she has been doing mainly bronzes. She has exhibited three times already at the New York Artexpo show, Art Miami, Art Philadelphia, and several International Art Fairs in Spain.
Ana's carreer brings this Israeli artist all over the world since her sculptures are part of many private collections all around the globe, as well as being shown in several galleries in the USA, in Israel-at Expressions Art Gallery-, in France, in South Korea and in Spain.