Born in
Hereford, he was the only son of Leonard Radford Welch (1894–1969) and his wife, Dorothy Perkins (1897–1982), who trained as an artist before their marriage in 1923.
Childhood When Robert was young, the family moved to the village of
Colwall, which sits on the side of the
Malvern Hills and, in 1939, to West
Malvern, Worcestershire where he grew up. He had a lifelong love of the
Malvern Hills and often walked there. He was educated at the boys' school in Colwall, then at Lyttelton Grammar School in Malvern where he sang in
Malvern Priory choir and finally
Hanley Castle Grammar School where he excelled at sport. He briefly played cricket for the Second XI of
Worcestershire County Cricket Club, before deciding to study at Malvern School of Art.
Malvern School of Art and Birmingham College of Art His time at Malvern was broken up by two years of
National Service, during which time he served as a wireless operator in the
Royal Air Force. While in the RAF he attended classes at
Cambridge School of Art before returning to complete his studies at Malvern, 1949–50. He had undertaken rudimentary metalwork classes at Malvern, or 'metal-bashing' as it was known, however he officially began his training as a silversmith at the
Birmingham College of Art, School of Silversmithing and Jewellery which was also where he completed his National Diploma in Design. Welch made his first work in a precious metal, a powder bowl, in 1950 but examples of his work in metals survive from as early as 1946.
Royal College of Art and Scandinavia He went on to study at the
Royal College of Art in 1952, the year after the
Festival of Britain, joining
David Mellor and
Gerald Benney who were both a year above him. Welch was the only silversmith in his year. All three were to become renowned in their field, creating "remarkable one-off commissions in silver, as well as tackling production designs in newly fashionable and affordable stainless steel. During the 1950s they had all been influenced to a large degree by the Scandinavian Modern style, especially the anthropomorphic vessels and jewellery of the Danish sculptor-designer Henning Koppel for
Georg Jensen." Lesley Jackson As a student, Welch made four extended visits to
Scandinavia, studying in
Stockholm and working with the Norwegian silversmith
Theodor Olsen. Scandinavian modernism made a huge impression on him, instilling a love of functional precision and the clean line. In his final year at the Royal College of Art, he decided to focus his studies on designing for stainless steel and wrote his thesis on
The Design and Production of Stainless Steel Tableware whilst focusing his final projects on the development of its look. “I felt that the first thing that had to be done was to establish a style for stainless ware which would be expressive of the material itself. A strong, tough, but not intractable medium, but one which was still the captive of the older materials. For instance, tableware in stainless steel was still being made in mirror finish only, and that seemed to me to have all the qualities of chromium-plated ware. It was a long way from the satin finish which was already coming in from Scandinavia. It seemed to me that this beautiful finish possessed just that note of severity which stainless steel seems to demand. Stainless steel needed to have its own appearance, not that of other metals, and the design had to go hand in hand with the function of the piece and that individual appearance." Robert Welch == Design career ==