Hendrick Bogaert (1630–1675) was a Dutch Golden Age painter.
According to the RKD he is known for genre works featuring farm scenes, and was the teacher of Joseph Mulder in 1672.
[1] Houbraken said Bogaert died in the Rotterdam "Gasthuis", or hospice, because he never saved money for his own old age.
[2] He lived life day-to-day, and was said to respond to friendly admonitions to think of his future for fear of landing in the gasthuis, with the comment "What's wrong with the hospice?
[2] Houbraken placed Bogaert's biography as a "bridge between the odor of brandywine coming from the painter Abraham Diepraam and the smell of poop from the engraver Joseph Mulder, who was his pupil".