Hendrik Voogd (Dutch pronunciation: [ˈɦɛndrɪk ˈfoːxt]; 10 July 1768 – 4 September 1839) was a Dutch painter and printmaker, who was active in Italy.
Hendrik Voogd was born on 10 July 1768 in Amsterdam in the Dutch Republic.
Beginning in 1783, Voogd studied at a local Academy and then later apprenticed under the wallpaper painter Jurriaan Andriessen. The financial aid of the Amsterdam art collector D. Versteegh (1751–1822) enabled him to depart in 1788 for Rome to obtain further training in landscape painting.
While in Italy, Voogd befriended many famous landscape painters, such as Nicolas-Didier Boguet, Johann Christian Reinhart and Johann Martin von Rohden.
Voogd died on 4 September 1839 in Rome in the Papal States.
It is apparent, from one of his infrequent letters home, that Voogd made numerous drawings of Rome and its surroundings, including Tivoli, Lazio, Lake Albano, Castel Gandolfo, and Lake Nemi. Some of these drawings, executed mostly in pencil and black chalk, consist of motifs taken directly from nature, such as trees and rocks; others portray views.