The ban of the second account was a result of posting photos of a “paint pour test” being conducted at The Womb in anticipation of Oliver Hibert’s exhibit opening this Friday. Below are the photos from the test the gallery and Oliver have shared:

Since last fall Instagram had almost become Wayne’s sole social media outlet (most of his tweets are automatically posted when he publishes on his Instagram account). On his original account he posted a treasure trove of concert photos, behind-the-scenes images of current Flaming Lips projects, rare band pictures and posters from their 30 year career, shots with other musicians (Patrick Carney, Kesha, Jack White, Kevin Parker, etc), weird art, playful selfies and random scenes from his daily life.

The vast majority of the 1227 photos from his original account – all now gone – were in good standing with Instagram’s terms of use by any measure. Those that violated the “partial nudity” rule, were posted jokingly – like the photo of his backside during his hospital stay in October 2012. Most of his risqué posts were art related – comic book drawings containing nudes or posters including women with bare breasts for example. Ironically his Instagram account was considerably tamer than his many pre-Instagram nude twitter posts from August 2011 through the first half of 2012, usual of his wife Michelle. His Instagrams were colorful no doubt – pictures of Patrick from The Black Keys wearing a T of Wayne flipping thee bird, jokes about getting drunk with Oklahoma’s Governor – but overwhelmingly within code. A typical post for Wayne’s first account was, say, a picture with someone like Justin Bieber, a plug for a lesser known artist, a dead bird on the street he’s stumbled upon, or random oddness, like a giant eyeball under construction. However, almost as though he wanted to get kicked off again, Wayne seemed less cautious with his second account (the one he created in September after his original account was banned).

The social media site clearly prohibits “sexually suggestive photos,” but doesn’t define the boundaries. Are the nudes in his comic book The Sun Is Sick too “suggestive” for Instagram? What about a painting of an alien giving birth, or a nude statue?

“I forget that a statue of a naked woman looks a lot like an actual naked woman to someone on Instagram,” Coyne told MTV News. “I totally understand that Instagram has their rules and they don’t want everything to be just a wide-open thing.”

“I know that Instagram’s like that, but sometimes I would forget, because I’m taking pictures of paintings and cartoons and stuff,” he explained to nme.com . “We had an opening at our gallery and I was doing a lot of pictures of stuff at the gallery and there was a statue we have and she’s naked, but if I take a picture, you can’t tell if she’s a statue – and I forget that.“

Below are The Womb tweets from September (with the now defunct Instagram links that presumably caused the ban):

Come to our Happnin Saturday night !!!! The Womb !!! Always free!! Always All Ages!! Always for… http://t.co/bCF0BSQVjN — Wayne Coyne (@waynecoyne) September 20, 2013

…new 3D room paint balloon evil alien giving birth to American dollars… http://t.co/nDc6ecMM5x — Wayne Coyne (@waynecoyne) September 20, 2013

…Saturday night!!! Womb Juice Dispencer in The Womb Room!! http://t.co/O53gmlzQnB — Wayne Coyne (@waynecoyne) September 21, 2013

@waynecoyne You get kicked off for the Birthing Dollars pic? Weak sauce @instagram — Dan (@SpencerDan) September 22, 2013

Been kicked off Instgrammmm !! Dang!! pic.twitter.com/fued01rBaZ — Wayne Coyne (@waynecoyne) September 21, 2013

Though Wayne may not be particularly bothered by getting kicked off Instagram (after all, he still has the photos on his phone), he has expressed regret for the many fans that were. Banning his account does not stop Wayne from posting more photos (under a different user name) after all, it only prohibits fans from seeing past posts. Aside from losing some of his 47306 former followers of his first account and 13085 of his second, Wayne was not punished – the fans were. As the petition to restore the original account noted, Instagram was harsher on Wayne than on mainstream celebrities who have posted photos violating their terms of use yet remain active (i.e. Tyler, the Creator, Nicki Minaj, Chrissy Teigen, Heidi Klum, Miranda Kerr, Rihanna).

Wayne sees his account as being more vulnerable to censorship than both accounts with few followers and mega-stars with massive followings. “You can almost do anything you want if no one follows you,” he told Stereogum a month after his original account was deleted, “but if you have a lot of followers, you can’t really do as much as you want until you get to where you have like a billion followers. The middle class man is always having problems. But yes, if I was like a Rihanna kind of Instagrammer, I could — and even her. I mean, you know, in her defense, I think it’s very entertaining. And I love what people say on her comment board. But yeah, I totally understand that. And I think that’s why Instagram is so popular, because it’s safe enough that every 12-year-old who’s got a computer can get on there if they want to. And that’s how you can amass 100 billion followers, and that’s what makes it so powerful and fun! But it’s got its limits, yeah. So like I said, I knew that I did those, but I had forgotten that if I did too many that got flagged in a row that they might just shut me off. And they did! But I just started up another one, and they didn’t seem to care, so I’m off and running again. I mean, I would say, I really do like it. And the same reasons that I like Twitter and the whole idea of even text messaging and stuff is that you just can get these little glimpses into what people are doing in their lives. And it just takes a moment. And when I see someone, it’s cool that you’re doing this, and that you stepped on this nail when you were in Wisconsin last week. I mean, just interesting stuff that you’d never call somebody about. It’s not remarkable, but it is the absolute boring everyday things that is our life. And I love it that way. I really have gotten to know people just from that.”

So how conservative is Instagram? It clearly depends on the user. Though they seem to be lenient with several celebrities, they were less so with the experiment tried by Jake Ingalls, Spaceface frontman and Flaming Lips touring member. “Well, my experiment did something,” he wrote on facebook on a few days after Wayne’s original boot. “Posted this on Instagram with the caption ‘Rebellious Sexedelic Instagram Post’ .. Got a shit ton of likes and then they only removed the picture – not my entire account.” It seems if he re-posted this several more times however, Instagram would delete his account:

So… Oddly enough, @waynecoyne got kicked off of Instagram… I can't even think of why, But that's… http://t.co/eTySSf5LKR — SPACEFACE (@spacefacemusic) September 22, 2013

The uproar over Wayne’s initial account deletion was partly because he had a reputation not just for NSFW pics, but also to be generous on Instagram. Being that he frequently plugged artists he came across or his collaborators, deleting Coyne’s messages wiped the slate of the attention he brought these lesser known artists. This potentially hurts them far more than the ban could impact Wayne, a well-established figure. This is why Jake was among the first to sign the petition to bring back Wayne’s account, writing:

Aside from maybe posting occasional suggestive pictures, Wayne uses this account to help out other struggling artists and musicians by keeping everyone updated on who he’s working with etc. All of his posts come only from a place of love and it makes no sense that you can’t just remove the one offensive photo, especially if you’ve given other artists said privilege. To remove his whole account seems like a move to inhibit a community of artists, rather than slap a man on the wrist..”

sign the petition to bring back wayne's images…http://t.co/QZwpixdiga @waynecoyne there's no place for censorship in a free society. — moby XⓋX (@thelittleidiot) September 23, 2013

Moby responded to the news of the original ban by tweeting, “they kicked wayne off of instagram? wha? his pictures are amazing,” then signing the petition with the following message:

there is no place for artistic censorship in a free society. especially when the artist in question is wayne coyne.. bring back wayne’s amazing images.

-moby“

https://twitter.com/theflaminglips/status/381818862078947331

I love how @waynecoyne's only reaction to having his Instagram account locked is "crap, better make a new one." — Andrew Moore (@theysayHeyDrew) September 24, 2013

Yeah but fuck it…. I juz made a new one @wayneflaminglip. “@LuMoulton: Free @waynecoyne! We're lacking his brilliance #Instagram” — Wayne Coyne (@waynecoyne) September 25, 2013

“I think we all would agree that in lieu of what is considered real, horrible problems in the world, just showing pictures of people without any clothes on seems pretty silly,” Wayne suggested to MTV News. “What’s the big deal here? But that’s the world I live in and a lot of people don’t live in that world. It’s a much more conservative world.”