Nakamura's personal
documentary Manzanar (1972) revisited childhood memories of incarceration in an
American concentration camp during World War II and has been selected for major retrospectives on the documentary form at the
San Francisco Museum of Art and Film Forum,
Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. In 1980, he co-directed
Hito Hata: Raise the Banner, considered to be one of the first Asian American feature films, produced by and about Asian Americans. He is the recipient of more than 30 national awards. He was the first to receive Visual Communications' Steve Tatsukawa Memorial Award in 1985 for leadership in Asian American media. In 1994, the Asian Pacific American Coalition in Cinema, Theatre & Television of UCLA instituted the "Robert A. Nakamura Award" to recognize outstanding contributions of other Asian Pacific American visual artists. In 1996, he founded the UCLA Center for EthnoCommunications. In 1997, the
Smithsonian Institution presented a retrospective of his work. Also that year, he created (with Ishizuka) the Frank H. Watase Media Arts Center at the
Japanese American National Museum. In 1999, he was named the Japanese American Alumni Professor of Japanese American Studies at
UCLA. Nakamura's film
Manzanar was preserved by the
Academy Film Archive in 2011. ==Personal life and death==