With the use of [SEDE](http://data.stackexchange.com/) (short for The Stack Exchange Data Explorer, [tutorial](http://data.stackexchange.com/tutorial)) and some SQL fu the following [query](http://data.stackexchange.com/stackoverflow/query/685751/tags-that-i-am-in-the-top-5-answeres?pos=10&UserId=7031230) gives you roughly what you're looking for:

<!-- language: lang-sql -->

    -- userid: User Id "The id in the url of your Stack Oveflow user profile"
    -- pos: Top position "What is the position you're interested in"
    ;with top_answerers as (
    select a.owneruserid
         , t.tagname 
         , sum(a.score) [tag score]
         , rank() over(partition by t.tagname order by sum(a.score) desc ) as pos
    from posts a
    inner join posts q on q.id = a.parentid
    inner join posttags pt on pt.postid = q.id
    inner join tags t on t.id = pt.tagid
    where a.posttypeid = 2 -- answer
    and q.posttypeid = 1 -- Question
    and a.owneruserid is not null 
    group by a.owneruserid
           , t.tagname
    )
    
    select tagname
         , pos
         , owneruserid as [User Link]
         , [tag score]
    from top_answerers
    where  owneruserid = ##userid?7031230##
    and pos <= ##pos?10##
    order by pos desc

You need to provide your user id (found in the url of [your profile](https://stackoverflow.com/users/current)) and a top position, that indicates if you want to see the tags where you are in the top 5, the top 10 or top 100. 

Above query does the heavy lifting in the CTE top_answerers by joining the answers in the posts table with the questions in the posts table and joining that via posttags to the tags table. The result is then grouped by user and tagname so we can get the sum of the answer score. By partitioning over tagname and ordering by the sum of scores we get all users rank for that tag.   
The main query only needs to limit the results to the user we're interested in and up to which position to include in the final result.

Keep in mind that SEDE is only updated once a week, on Sunday so the result of the query might not reflect your current rank. 

When run today this is the result:

[![enter image description here][1]][1]

Unfortunately you can't have this automatically update in your profile as the about me box doesn't allow for running scripts. At best you could host an image on a server you control and then write some parsing code to update the image once a week on your server. I leave that for the reader to implement.

  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/g3J36.png