An exhibition of diverse student art opens today at the Hopkins Hall Gallery.The 1998 Undergraduate Art Students Juried Exhibition, which runs until March 13, is sponsored by the Art Students League.”The show’s a great opportunity for the campus community to view some very diverse, but very good, student work,” said Prudence Gill, curator of the Hopkins Hall Gallery.Ohio State students submit pieces for the gallery. Three students were selected Friday to receive $100 awards for their work.The three judges of the show were Bob Arnold and Larry Williamson of OSU and Gretchen Cochran of Oberlin College.The judges based their decisions on three basic points: “risk, passion, and subtleties portrayed in the works,” said Jason Pitz, president of the Art Student League.Do-Young Lee, an international student from Korea, won with “untitled, (for my mom)” mixed-media sculpture. Leah Schnaars’ “Breed,” a fur, hair, wax, polymer clay and Styrofoam sculpture also received an award, along with Christopher McMerriman’s “Stereotypes,” a silver gelatin print.”My great joy is with the revitalization of the Art Student League, and it’s real involvement with other students and the art school,” Gill said. “The league has the potential to reach out to all disciplines on campus.”The nature of the show includes both “selective and unselective” works appearing in the exhibition, which means that all works presented for review by the jury are included in the overall exhibit, Pitz said.”No one’s work is excluded,” he said. “There are some great pieces that weren’t selected for an award. Along with those selected, that represents a diverse, high-quality representation of student artwork.”People can meet the show’s artists March 2 from 5 to 7 p.m. at the opening reception. There will be a 4:30 p.m. pre-reception dialogue with judge Bob Arnold on the process of judge selection.”This exhibition can speak to those from anatomy to zoology because there is reasonably-priced artwork in the show that can be purchased, and can be considered relevant to the discipline,” Gill said.