Joseph Bernhard Hubert Enseling ((1886-11-28)28 November 1886 – (1957-07-16)16 July 1957) was a German sculptor and university professor.
After training as a sculptor, Enseling studied from 1905 to 1910 with the sculptor Rudolf Bosselt, the painter and designer Peter Behrens and the architect Wilhelm Kreis at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf and from 1910 to 1912 at the Académie Colarossi in Paris with Aristide Maillol.
Enseling's work, which was often commissioned, consists of industrial and mining monuments as well as architectural sculptures, which were often created in collaboration with locally and regionally known architects such as Edmund Körner or Georg Metzendorf.
In Essen, Enseling produced the putti (1910) on the Moltkebrücke and two allegorical giants (1911) in the immediate vicinity at the main entrance of the building trade school (today's Robert Schmidt vocational college) in the Moltkeviertel and the treasure trove fountain (1911/1912) on the Market place of the Margarethenhöhe.
One of them was the memorial erected on the market square in Essen-Frintrop in 1927 to commemorate those who died in the first World War, which was destroyed in a bomb attack on December 31, 1944.