Jeroen Henneman (Haarlem, 1942) is a versatile Dutch artist known for his sculptures, paintings, drawings, graphics and objects. He studied at the Institute for Applied Arts in Amsterdam from 1959 to 1961 and then travelled through Belgium, France, Switzerland and the United States. He has lived and worked in Amsterdam since 1967.
Henneman is often called a 'linesman' because of his characteristic style: he transforms simple line drawings into three-dimensional sculptures that he calls 'standing drawings'. These works play with the illusion of space.
He is known for, among other things, the monument for Theo van Gogh, De Schreeuw, in the Oosterpark in Amsterdam and for Het Wiel at the headquarters of the Tax and Customs Administration.