The Wounded Man (French: L'Homme blessé) is an oil-on-canvas self-portrait created between 1844 and 1854 by the French Realist painter Gustave Courbet.
In it, Courbet depicts himself in a romantic theme as a suffering, heroic man.
Originally, the composition featured a woman leaning on the artist's shoulder.
Sometime before May 1854, Courbet replaced her with a sword, and added a red bloodstain on his shirt.
[1] Courbet's decision to depict himself as a wounded man may have arisen from his distress at the dissolution, circa 1851, of his 14-year relationship with Virginie Binet, with whom he had a son.