New Delhi: Vedanta Chairman Anil Agarwal has announced the launch of Vividh Verse, a premium bilingual magazine aimed at celebrating India’s cultural diversity, emerging ideas and evolving national identity through long-form storytelling and thought-provoking conversations.

Sharing the announcement on X, Agarwal described the publication as a long-held dream — a platform designed to bring together the “many colors” of India and the world under one creative and intellectual space. According to him, the magazine seeks to blend heritage with futuristic thinking, offering readers a mix of culture, dialogue, personalities, innovation and “food for thought.”

Positioned as both a print collectible and digital storytelling platform, Vividh Verse aims to stand apart in today’s fast-moving digital era by creating space for reflective narratives, meaningful discussions and immersive reading experiences. The magazine will feature voices from across India’s social and cultural spectrum — including entrepreneurs, artists, policymakers, innovators, grassroots changemakers and thought leaders shaping modern India.

Vedanta said the publication has been designed as a premium cultural magazine covering a broad range of subjects such as public policy, entrepreneurship, wellness, sports, technology, grassroots India, culture and emerging trends. The company believes the platform will serve as a meeting point for diverse perspectives and contemporary Indian aspirations.

The inaugural edition features several prominent personalities from different fields, including Bollywood actor Pankaj Tripathi, Union Minister Arjun Ram Meghwal, classical dancer Sonal Mansingh, Olympic medallist Manu Bhaker, entrepreneur Rahul Garg and musician Flipperachi. Their conversations in the magazine revolve around authenticity, resilience, nation-building, creativity, innovation and India’s changing cultural landscape.

One of the publication’s standout features is its collectible format. Each issue of Vividh Verse will reportedly include a specially commissioned limited-edition framed artwork, positioning the magazine not just as reading material but also as a curated cultural keepsake.

Industry observers see the launch as Vedanta’s attempt to expand beyond the corporate and industrial space into cultural storytelling and intellectual engagement, at a time when premium print publications are increasingly becoming niche collectibles in the digital age.

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